. 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. outside by the space between oneoar, or oar-port, and another. The INTERTIGNIUM. LRPEX. 355 illustration is from an ancient Romanfresco painting discovered in theFarnese gardens. INTERTIGNIUM. The spacebetween the ends of the tie beams(tigna, bbb. in the example) whichrest upon the architrave (trabs, a) inthe


. 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. outside by the space between oneoar, or oar-port, and another. The INTERTIGNIUM. LRPEX. 355 illustration is from an ancient Romanfresco painting discovered in theFarnese gardens. INTERTIGNIUM. The spacebetween the ends of the tie beams(tigna, bbb. in the example) whichrest upon the architrave (trabs, a) inthe timber work of a roof. ( 2. 2. and 4.) Six of these are hereshown ; and in the earliest buildingsthese intervals were left open ; but,subsequently, they were covered overwith slabs of marble, so as to form of love, represented in the example,from a bronze of Herculaneum,. part of a continuous frieze (zophorus),or to form a metope (metopa) in theDoric order. INTERULA. Seems to be iden-tical with Subucula, the innermosttunica (interior or intima), worn nextthe skin ; and is applied jindiscrimi-nately to both sexes. (Apul. 9. Id. Met. viii. p. 159. 4,) See the illustrations and Subucula. INTESTINARIUS. A mechanicemployed in making what are nowcalled the fittings in the interior of ahouse ; a carpenter and joiner. 13. 4. 2. Inscripi ap. 6. ap. Orelli. 4182. INTESTTNUM, sc. opus. Thefittings of wood in the inside of ahouse, such as doors, window frames,and shutters ; or carpenter and join-ers work. Vitruv. v. 2. Varro, iii. 1. 10. Plin. H. N. xvi. 82. IXTOXSUS (aKepaeKOfivs). Un-shorn ; i. e. wearing long hair; withan implied sense of youthfulness;for both the Greeks and Romanscropped their hair upon arriving atthe age of puberty, after which pe-riod long hair was regarded as un-manly ; excepting with


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1840, booksubjectclassicaldictionarie