Dodatkowe przykłady dopasowywane są do haseł w zautomatyzowany sposób - nie gwarantujemy ich poprawności.
Passus helps people who want to leave gangs and criminal organizations.
Now she's made passus out of her family, lying to them as she's lied to everyone else.
If it were nominative, "an equal step" it would be par passus.
The English word "passive" derives from the Latin passus.
There are 2 gradūs in one passus.
A similar passage in the final Passus of the B- and C-texts provides further ambiguous details.
For example the passus duriusculus.
It's some eighteen mille passus beyond Isca.
It is written in unrhymed alliterative verse divided into sections called "passus" (Latin for "step").
A pace (or double-pace or passus) was a measure of distance used in Ancient Rome.
In music theory, passus duriusculus is a Latin term which refers to chromatic line, often a bassline, whether descending or ascending.
In the 16th century the repeated melodic semitone became associated with weeping, see: passus duriusculus, lament bass, and pianto.
Many composers have prolonged the setting of the word passus in the Credo through the use of techniques such as melisma, syncopation, and suspension.
Crucufixus etiam pro nobis: sub Pontio Pilato passus et sepultus est. .
With the Gächinger Kantorei he appeared in the premiere of Rihm's Deus Passus on 29 August 2000.
The attribution to William Langland is also based on internal evidence, primarily a seemingly autobiographical section in Passus 5 of the C-text of the poem.
It derived from the unattested Greek adjective pathikos, from the verb paskhein, equivalent to the Latin deponent patior, pati, passus, "undergo, submit to, endure, suffer."
Diodorus Siculus, in another passus, says that Ducetius colonised Kale Akte in 440 BCE, the same year he died.
The end of Piers Plowman, Passus 15, makes this point at length-but it is also made briefly in one stanza in The Ploughman's Tale (ll.
The "autobiographical" passage which opens passus 5 combines autobiographical and confessional modes to reintegrate the penitent subject-both "Will" and WL-into the body of the Church.
The extent of jurisdiction of the Duoviri is derived from their full title as Duoviri viis extra propiusve urbem Romam passus mille purgandis.
Et incipiens loca omnia, in quibus Christus passus est, et miracula, quae viderat, adeo plene explicuit, ut nec in aliquo deviaret.
The elaborate solo lines of the "Recordare" jarred with the blunt, chiming text ("Quaerens me sedisti lassus/Redemisti crucem passus"), and the movement eventually descended into tasteless vocal exercises.
In Latin, passus was the word for "step", so originally, French Je ne marche pas and Catalan No camino pas meant "I will not walk a single step."
In music, a chromatic fourth, or passus duriusculus, is a melody or melodic fragment spanning a perfect fourth with all or almost all chromatic intervals filled in (chromatic line).