Definition of Togate

1. pertaining to ancient Rome [adj]

Lexicographical Neighbors of Togate

tofurky
tofus
tofutti
tofuttis
tog
tog out
tog up
toga party
toga virilis
togae
togaed
togalike
togarishi
togas
togate (current term)
togated
togaviridae infections
togavirus
togaviruses
toge
togeather
toged
togemans
toges
together
togetherness
togethernesses
togey
togged

Literary usage of Togate

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. Roman Medallions in the British Museum by Herbert Appold Grueber, Reginald Stuart Poole (1874)
"COS I III (in exergue) Emperor, togate, seated 1. on curule chair, his feet on footstool, holding scroll in 1. hand, and with r. receiving ears of corn from ..."

2. Corinth: The Centenary, 1896-1996 by Charles K. Williams, Nancy Bookidis (2003)
"In one example, an Augustan togate figure, S-2838, was found in the Theater next to a late corner pier of the east parodos. However, the right foot (S-2838) ..."

3. Archaeology of Houses and Households in Ancient Crete by Kevin Glowacki, Natalia Vogeikoff-Brogan (2008)
"A bearded, togate man holds a male child by the ear in a gesture that certainly indicates responsibility, and a man dressed in a tunic on the right side ..."

4. American Journal of Archaeology by Archaeological Institute of America (1887)
"There are some medallion portraits of togate personages hi addition to the symbolical imageries, but all sadly battered. Tripoli boasts few other ..."

5. All the Year Round by Charles Dickens (1870)
"Their serious and genteel comedy was named togate, from toga, the Roman gown, the characters being persons of good rank ; and sometimes ..."

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