Dodatkowe przykłady dopasowywane są do haseł w zautomatyzowany sposób - nie gwarantujemy ich poprawności.
He reached for his glasses and began reading the elegant uncial script.
They are written in several types of uncial script.
In general, there are some common features of uncial script:
It was written in the 4th century in Uncial script letters.
The text is written in small square uncial script.
The commentary was written in a different kind of uncial script than the biblical text.
The text was written in a single column with well-formed uncial script.
It contains scholia at the margin in small uncial script.
The beginning of each psalm is indicated by an ornamented initial in uncial script.
The text is written in an uncial script, with red letters indicating the beginnings of paragraphs.
Early uncial script is likely to have developed from late Old Roman cursive.
It is written in an uncial script.
It has margin notes in uncial script to the Acts of Apostles.
Most of the papyrus manuscripts and the lectionaries before the year 1000 are written in uncial script.
The text is written on vellum in two columns in Uncial script with no division between words.
After examination he realized that they were part of the Septuagint, written in an early Greek uncial script.
The letter phi is enormously large, the letter alpha presents the last stage of the uncial script.
As writing withdrew to monasteries, uncial script was found more suitable for copying the Bible and other religious texts.
It does not use breathings and accents and the text of the commentary is written in uncial script.
The fragments are in Greek written in uncial script, and are dated to the end of the 6th-century.
Cyrillic, which was also a phonetic alphabet, was based on the Greek uncial script.
Manuscripts produced at Echternach are known to have been in both insular and Roman half uncial script.
It is written in Latin uncial script that paleographers have dated to about AD 700.
There are over 500 surviving copies of uncial script, by far the largest number prior to the Carolingian Renaissance.
The text is in a "superior uncial script", while the instructions to the artist are in "an eccentric Roman cursive".