. The illustrated companion to the Latin dictionary and Greek lexicon; forming a glossary of all the words representing visible objects connected with the arts, manufactures, and every-day life of the Greeks and Romans, with representations of nearly two thousand objects from the antique. sions as sagasumere— in sagis esse — ad saga ire— are always indicative of turbulentand troubled times or of a state ofactual warfare. Caes. B. C. i. Fragm. ap. Non. s. v. p. Phil viii. 11. Liv. Epit. 72. 2. A saddle-cloth; composed ofcoarse shagplaced under the /zJ\§\tree-saddle (sella ^


. The illustrated companion to the Latin dictionary and Greek lexicon; forming a glossary of all the words representing visible objects connected with the arts, manufactures, and every-day life of the Greeks and Romans, with representations of nearly two thousand objects from the antique. sions as sagasumere— in sagis esse — ad saga ire— are always indicative of turbulentand troubled times or of a state ofactual warfare. Caes. B. C. i. Fragm. ap. Non. s. v. p. Phil viii. 11. Liv. Epit. 72. 2. A saddle-cloth; composed ofcoarse shagplaced under the /zJ\§\tree-saddle (sella ^j- Jrl,Bn=:f~) or i/jUHthe pack-saddle rJr^^lKit(sagma), to pre- //I p\y vent the hard Jf 1^^L-JL_substance from *^ZL_~—===^galling the animals back ( iii. 59. 2.), as exhibited by theannexed illustration from a paintingat Herculaneum. SAL/GAMA (ret aXfiala). Pickles;made from roots, herbs, fruit, &c,potted down and preserved in x. 117. Id. xii. 4. 4. SALGAMARIUS (dx^vr-fis).One who makes and deals in pickles(salgama) of the kind last xii. 44. 1. SALIENS. SALISUBSULUS. 567 SALIENS. A jet deau, or arti-ficial fountain in which the water ismade to shoot forth or leap up by theforce of its own pressure, in passing. through a small tube (sipho) whichgives it vent. (Cic. Q. Fr. iii. 1. viii. 6. 2. Ulp. Dig. 19. ) Agrippa formed one hundredand five of these fountains in the cityof Rome (Plin. H. N. xxxvi. 24. §9.), and the illustration exhibits onestill remaining in the fullers estab-lishment at Pompeii. S A L 11 (SoAfoi). The Salii;twelve priests of Mars Gradivus, whohad the custody of the ancilia, orsacred shields. Their costume con-sisted of an embroidered tunic, girtround the waist with a broad militarybelt of bronze (Cingulum, 4.) ; orpossibly covered by abreastplate (Pecto-rale), which seemsmore probable; andthe trabea for an out-ward mantle. Ontheir heads a pointedbonnet (Apex) ; ashort sword su


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1840, booksubjectclassicaldictionarie