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Topic: Jerome (disambiguation)


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In the News (Sun 27 Dec 09)

  
  Jerome - Encyclopedia, History, Geography and Biography
Jerome was born at Stridon, on the border between Pannonia and Dalmatia (most likely modern Grahovopolje in Bosnia and Herzegovina), in the second quarter of the fourth century.
Jerome was born to Christian parents, but was not baptized until about 360, when he had gone to Rome with his friend Bonosus to pursue his rhetorical and philosophical studies.
Jerome's letters or epistles, both by the great variety of their subjects and by their qualities of style, form the most interesting portion of his literary remains.
www.arikah.net /encyclopedia/Jerome   (3010 words)

  
 Jerome Encyclopedia Article @ Disagreeable.org   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-11)
Jerome was born at Stridon, on the border between Pannonia and Dalmatia (most likely modern Grahovo polje in Bosnia and Herzegovina), in the second quarter of the fourth century.
Jerome was an Illyrian, he was born to Christian parents, but was not baptized until about 360, when he had gone to Rome with his friend Bonosus to pursue his rhetorical and philosophical studies.
Jerome was a noted scholar of Latin at a time when that statement implied a fluency in Greek.
www.disagreeable.org /encyclopedia/Jerome   (3150 words)

  
 The Book Of Tobit - LoveToKnow 1911
Jerome's version is from the Aramaic, or, as it used to be called, the Chaldee.
According to Neubauer, it is the very text which was used by Jerome, after allowance has been made for the arbitrary methods of the Rabbis and of Jerome himself.
Josephus displays no knowledge of the work, but he may have been animated by the same prejudice as the Pharisees of St Jerome's day, whose displeasure, that father tells us, he had to face in giving to Latin readers a book which was against their canon.
www.1911encyclopedia.org /The_Book_Of_Tobit   (1490 words)

  
 Wikipedia: Lucifer
Lucifer is mentioned in only one place in the Bible (Isaiah 14:12), in translations based on the Latin translation largely made by St. Jerome in the fourth century.
Jerome's Vulgate translation of Isaiah 1:14 makes Lucifer the name of the principal fallen angel who must lament the loss of his original glory as the morning star.
This image at last defines the character of Lucifer; where the Church Fathers had maintained that lucifer was not the proper name of the Devil, and that it referred rather to the state from which he had fallen; St. Jerome transformed it into Satan's proper name.
www.factbook.org /wikipedia/en/l/lu/lucifer.html   (446 words)

  
 Qwika - Lucifer
"Lucifer" is Jerome's direct translation in his Vulgate (4th century) of the Septuagint's Greek translation, as heosphoros, "morning star" or "Day Star," literally "bringer of the Dawn", of a phrase in Isaiah 14:12, where it is used to refer to the Babylonian king by one of his popular honorific titles.
From the viewpoint of the 5th century Christian tradition, Lucifer is seen as having been second in command to God himself; he was the highest archangel in heaven, but he was motivated by pride and greed to rebel against God and was cast out of heaven, followed by a third of the host of heaven.
Heilel signifies the planet Venus, and ben-shachar means "the brilliant one, son of the morning", to whose mythical fate that of the King of Babylon is compared in the prophetic vision.
wikipedia.qwika.com /wiki/Lucifer   (1879 words)

  
 Jerome biography .ms   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-11)
Jerome's edition, the Vulgate, is still the official biblical text of the Roman Catholic Church.
He was born at Stridon, on the border between Pannonia and Dalmatia, in the second quarter of the fourth century, and died near Bethlehem Sept. 30, 420.
Jerome's letters, both by the great variety of their subjects and by their qualities of style, form the most interesting portion of his literary remains.
jerome.biography.ms   (2809 words)

  
 Translation
Jerome is still considered one of the greatest translators in histroy for his work on translating the work into Latin.
Jerome's translation was used by the Catholic Church for centuries, but even his translation met much controversy when it was released.
The Protestant Reformation saw the translation of the Bible into the local languages of Europe, and act condemned by the Catholic Church and one that had a gret impact on the split between Protestantism and Catholicism.
www.ebroadcast.com.au /lookup/encyclopedia/tr/Translator.html   (480 words)

  
 Jerome - Wikitravel
Jerome (Arkansas) - A town in the state of Arkansas.
Jerome (Illinois) - A town in the state of Illinois.
Jerome (Pennsylvania) - A town in the state of Pennsylvania.
wikitravel.org /en/Jerome   (116 words)

  
 chef jerome brown, chef, chef-d'oeuvre, St. Jerome, Jerome, Saint Jerome, chef jerome brown, chef jerome brown's book, ...   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-11)
E, was brought into vogue by the jerome jesuits michels and pants by mo the court architects, by whom the chateau of versailles book was deemed the highest chef-d'oeuvre book of chef art.
This style of chef architecture was accompanied chef by brown's a style of sculpture equally unmeaning pants and forced; saints michels and pagan deities in jerome theatrical attitudes, jerome fat genii, and.
Jerome the predilection chef for ancient chef gems chef promoted top the study of book the remains of antiquity, jerome as stosch, lippert, and winckelmann prove, and chef that st. Of natural history was greatly chef facilitated chef by brown the collections chef of natural curiosities.
ultimaavatarwashard.info /chef/chef-jerome-brown.php   (1189 words)

  
 Jerome   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-11)
Jerome, by [[Peter Paul Rubens]] Jerome (about 340 - September 30, 420), (full name Eusebius Sophronius Hieronymus) is best known as the translator of the Bible from Greek and Hebrew into Latin.
Jerome died near Bethlehem on Sept. 30, 420.
One of Jerome's earliest attempts in the department of history was his Chronicle (or Chronicon or Temporum liber), composed c.380 in Constantinople; this is a translation into Latin of the chronological tables which compose the second part of the Chronicon of Eusebius, with a supplement covering the period from 325 to 379.
jerome.iqnaut.net   (2825 words)

  
 Jerome Hotel
Jerome Klapka Jerome (May 2, 1859–June 14, 1927) was an English author, best known for the humorous travelogue ''Three Men in a Boat''.
Jerome Kern was born in New York City.
Jerome Callet (born April 24, 1930) is a musician, teacher and designer of brass instruments.
www.artistbooking.com /trips/116/jerome-hotel.html   (1318 words)

  
 Jerome - Hutchinson encyclopedia article about Jerome   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-11)
From the 1880s to the 1920s, Jerome was a boom town that grew rich on copper mining, and acquired a reputation for lawlessness.
After the closure of local mines in the 1950s, it became a centre for the arts and tourism.
Jerome, confining himself to the Hebrew, calls this sea Jamsuf.
encyclopedia.farlex.com /Jerome   (180 words)

  
 Jerome at Idaho Real Estate   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-11)
Before Jerome was Jerome it was the site of a small dig mined by the local Yavapai tribe over billion in copper gold silver.
Jerome Bruner was born in New York in.
Jerome Blog Page Before Jerome was Jerome it was the site of a small dig mined by the local Yavapai tribe over billion in copper gold silver.
www.articlessiteandinformation.info /idaho-real-estate/jerome.php   (561 words)

  
 Bobbie Jerome   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-11)
He was born at Stridon, on the border between Pannonia and Dalmatia, in the second quarterof the fourth century, and died near Bethlehem Sept. 30, 420.
Jerome is a name shared across the European languages in remarkably unintuitive forms: Latin (and German) Hieronymus,English Jurome, French Jérôme, Dutch Jeroen, Italian Girolamo and Spanish Jerónimo.
Jerome was born to Christian parents, but was not baptized until about 360, when he hadgone to Rome with his friend Bonosus to pursue his rhetorical and philosophic studies.
www.super8filmmaking.com /tail/32262-bobbie-jerome.html   (539 words)

  
 Pelagius Summary
His chief enemy was Jerome, the scholarly ascetic who had left Rome to establish a monastery in Bethlehem and who, by disposition, was critical of Pelagius and his views.
The letter of excommunication was followed by another sent directly to the bishop of Jerusalem decrying both the attack on the monastery and the fact that John was harboring a heretic in his midst.
Jerome wrote against Pelagius in his letter to Ctesiphon and "Dialogus contra Pelagianos." With Jerome at the time was Orosius, a visiting pupil of Augustine, with a similar apprehension of the dangers of Pelagianism.
www.bookrags.com /Pelagius   (3475 words)

  
 Project-Team-CALLIGRAMME
Their parsing procedure is effected in two steps: the first achieves lexical disambiguation by a global counting of polarities; the second step is the parsing process itself.
For lexical disambiguation, the key idea of our method is the definition of an abstraction morphism from the considered formalism to a simpler one.
This morphism ensures that parsing in the simpler formalism is equivalent to lexical disambiguation in the former one.
www.inria.fr /rapportsactivite/RA2004/calligramme/uid42.html   (1285 words)

  
 Wikinfo | Translation   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-11)
Jerome is still considered one of the greatest translators in history for his work on translating the work into Latin.
The Protestant Reformation saw the translation of the Bible into the local languages of Europe, and act condemned by the Catholic Church and one that had a great impact on the split between Protestantism and Catholicism.
Images, some of which are used under the doctrine of Fair use or used with permission, may not be available.
www.wikinfo.org /wiki.php?title=Translation   (688 words)

  
 Cannons
Jerome had brought her two elder daughters to join in the gaieties of the regatta.
Jerome settled a sum of £50,000 (approximately £2.5 million at present values), producing an income of £2,000 a year, with a half of both capital and income belonging to the husband and a half to the wife.
Eventually a compromise was reached, by which Jerome settled a sum of £50,000 (approximately £2.5 Million at present values), producing an income of £2,000 a year, with a half of both capital and income belonging to the husband and a half to the wife.
judicial-inc.biz /Jenny_Jacobson_Churchill_supplement.htm   (5490 words)

  
 Lucifer
"Lucifer" is Jerome's direct translation in his Vulgate (4th century) of the Septuagint's Greek translation, as heosphoros, "morning star" or "Day Star," literally "bringer of the Dawn", of a phrase in from Isaiah 14:12.
From the viewpoint of the Christian tradition, Lucifer is seen as having been second in command to God himself; he was the highest archangel in heaven, but he was motivated by pride and greed to rebel against God and was cast out of heaven, followed by a third of the host of heaven.
Jerome, with the Septuagint close at hand and a general familiarity with the pagan poetic traditions, translated Helel as Lucifer.
www.sfcrowsnest.com /scifinder/a/Lucifer.php   (1655 words)

  
 Help Writing Cover Letter   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-11)
Jerome's edition, the Vulgate, is still the official biblical text of the Church.
Jerome's edition, the Vulgate, is still the official biblical text of the Rhine" where he seems to have first taken up theological studies, and where he seems to have first taken up theological studies, and where he copied, for his friend Rufinus,...
Life Jerome was born to Christian parents, but was not baptized until about 360, when he had gone to Rome with his friend Rufinus,...
cov5.mine-yours.com /helpwritingcoverletter.html   (1193 words)

  
 Jerome Bettis Foam Bus resources, guides, and information   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-11)
sophonias jerome chapter air 1 for foam divers jerome enormous rubber sins, at the jerome kingdom rubber of air juda lines is threatened station with severe judgment.
Jerome that is, i will assuredly jerome take shocksalegro away, and wholly consume, either by captivity, or bus death, both men do and beasts out of this land.
I will gather man, and beast, i will lines gather the jamaica birds of station the jerome air, and shocksalegro the foam fishes foam of the sea: and the ungodly shall meet detergent with ruin: bus and i will destroy jerome men from off the face of the land, saith the lord.
professional-online-digital-photo-lab.info /bus/jerome-bettis-foam-bus.php   (2279 words)

  
 Jerome (disambiguation) - One Language   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-11)
Jerome is the name of several places in the United States:
This is a disambiguation page — a navigational aid which lists other pages that might otherwise share the same title.
If an article link referred you here, you might want to go back and fix it to point directly to the intended page.
www.onelang.com /encyclopedia/index.php/Jerome_(disambiguation)   (105 words)

  
 Australian Information from Wikipedia
The word Lucifer was the direct translation of the Greek eosphorus ("dawn-bearer"; cf.
Greek phosphorus, "light-bearer") used by Jerome in the Vulgate, having mythologically the same meaning as Prometheus who brought fire to humanity.
In the Vulgate, an early-5th-century translation of the Bible into Latin by Jerome, Lucifer occurs in Isaiah 14:12-14 as a translation of the Greek word heosphorus ("dawn-bearer"), an epithet of Venus.
www.thinkingaustralia.com /thinking_australia/wikipedia/default.php?title=Lucifer   (3639 words)

  
 Bible - Encyclopedia, History, Geography and Biography
While Jerome included the Deuterocanonical books (such as Tobias, Sirach, and Wisdom) in the publication of the Vulgate or Latin Bible, he called these books the Apocrypha.
The Septuagint (Greek translation, from Alexandria in Egypt under the Ptolemies) was generally abandoned in favor of the Masoretic text as the basis for translations of the Old Testament into Western languages from Saint Jerome's Vulgate to the present day.
This translation became known as the Latin Vulgate Bible and was declared by the Church to be the only authentic and official bible.
www.arikah.com /encyclopedia/Bible   (4891 words)

  
 Bonaparte
In 1804 Napoleon changed the arms to Azure an imperial eagle or.
The change applied to all members of his family except for his brother Lucien, and the son of Jerome's first marriage.
Napoleon's son Napoleon Joseph (1811-1832) was created king of Rome (1811-1814) and was later styled Napoleon II by loyalists of the dynasty, though he never actually ruled as Emperor.
www.ebroadcast.com.au /lookup/encyclopedia/bo/Bonaparte.html   (439 words)

  
 Jerome Napoleon Bonaparte II   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-11)
Jerome Napoleon Bonaparte II (November 5 1830 - September 3 1893) was a son of Jerome Napoleon Bonaparte and Susan May Williams.
Jerome Napoleon Charles Bonaparte (1878-1945) married in 1914 Blanche Pierce Stenbeigh daughter of Edward Emily Pierce of Newtonville Massachusetts and former of Harold Stenbeigh of Hewlitt New York: children.
Jerome Bonaparte: The War Years, 1800-1815 (Contributions in Military Studies)
www.freeglossary.com /Jerome_Napoleon_Bonaparte_II   (268 words)

  
 Winston Churchill   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-11)
Born at Blenheim Palace near the town Woodstock Oxfordshire Winston Churchill was a descendant of first famous member of the Churchill family: John Churchill 1st Duke of Marlborough (whose father was also a "Sir Churchill").
Winston's politician father Lord Randolph Churchill was the third son of the Duke of Marlborough: Winston's mother was Jennie Jerome (née Jeanette Jerome) of Brooklyn New York a daughter of American millionaire Leonard
The American song writer Jerome Kern was christened Jerome because his parents near a park named Jerome Park.
www.freeglossary.com /Winston_Churchill   (4252 words)

  
 Jerome - Biography of Jerome
Jerome is a name shared across the European languages in remarkably unintuitive forms: Latin (and German) Hieronymus, English Jerome, French Jérôme, Dutch Jeroen, Italian Girolamo and Spanish and Portuguese Jerónimo.
By Jerome Cartillier Lobatse, Botswana - The Bushmen are currently spread over Namibia and Botswana and in some measure in South Africa; these hunter-gatherers who speak a language replete with clicks have for...Comment
SOMEWHERE: THE LIFE OF JEROME ROBBINS By Amanda Vaill Broadway Books, $35 In 1998, when I was assigned to write the obituary for the theatrical genius Jerome Robbins, I decided to call someone who knew him...Comment
www.spiritus-temporis.com /jerome   (561 words)

  
 Lucifer
From the viewpoint of the Christian mythology that developed after Jerome, Lucifer came to be seen as having been second in command to God himself; he was the highest archangel in heaven, but he was motivated by pride and greed to rebel against God and was cast out of heaven by Archangel Michael.
As bright and as brilliant as it is, it is possible that ancient people couldn't understand why it couldn't be seen at midnight like the outer planets, or during midday, like the Sun and Moon, thusly inventing myths and stories about it being "cast out of the high heavens" or "fallen from heaven".
Much of Christian tradition also draws on interpretations of Revelation 12:5 ("He was thrown down, that ancient serpent"; see also 12:7 and 12:100) in equating the ancient serpent-god with the serpent in the Garden of Eden and the fallen star, Lucifer, with Satan.
www.paleorama.com /Disney-L/Lucifer.php   (2474 words)

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