destinatus
81VALERIUS Fabianus — honoribus destinatus, qui cum Domitio Balbo, seni diviti atque orbo, propinquo suo, testamentum subdisislet, legt Corneliâ damnatus est, sub Nerone. Tacit. l. 14. Annal. c. 48 …
82VALERIUS Marinus — destinatus a Galba Consul, dilatus a Vitellio nullâ nullâ offensâ, sed mitis et iniuriam segniter laturus. Tacit. l. 2. Histor. c. 71 …
83VALETUDINARIUM — in Vita Austrebertae Virg. c. 3. In stragulo ad Valetudinarium deportaverunt: locus est in Monasteriis, aerorum curae destinatus, qui Infirmarium alias, in Glossis Latino Graec. ὑγιαςτήριον et διαιτητήριον dicitur. Vox Senecae, Ep. 27. Columellae …
84WILHELMUS — I. WILHELMUS Comes Palatinus Tubinae, cum fratre Goezzone maiorenatu, tubingam vendidit, avoppignoravit, Ulrico Duci Wirtembergico A. C. 1342. II. WILHELMUS Dux Lunaeburgicus, fil. Iohannis praefati, cum filias tantum Elisabetham Ottoni Saxoniae… …
85Destinatar — Des|ti|na|tar . Des|ti|na|tär der; s, e <aus fr. destinataire »Empfänger« bzw. zu lat. destinatus, Part. Perf. von destinare (vgl. ↑destinieren), u. ↑...ar>: 1. diejenige [natürliche od. juristische] Person, der [vom Gesetzgeber her] die… …
86destiny — [14] Etymologically, one’s destiny is that which has been firmly established or determined for one (as if by fate). The word comes from destinee, the Old French descendant of Latin dēstinātus. This was the past participle of dēstināre ‘make firm …
87CAESIMPDESTIN — Caesar imperator destinatus …
88article — Article, Il vient de Articulus. Un article d une loy ou autre chose, Caput legis. Article concernant la recepte du blé, et des revenuz et domaine de la ville, Caput frumenti, vectigalium, etc. Les articles et item d un conte et autres papiers,… …
89tauxer — Tauxer, ou Taxer despens, Rationes inire expensorum in lites, Rationem sumptuum litis inire, Dispungere rationes expensorum in litem, B. Tauxer les despens en la presence des procureurs des parties, Rationes sumptuarias litium pro potestate inire …
90destiny — [14] Etymologically, one’s destiny is that which has been firmly established or determined for one (as if by fate). The word comes from destinee, the Old French descendant of Latin dēstinātus. This was the past participle of dēstināre ‘make firm …