"psalterium", reveals its perceived similarity with the instrument of the. From Wordnik.com. [Conservapedia - Recent changes [en]] Reference
Item aliud psalterium glosatum inpignoratum penes Isabellam Siccadona. From Wordnik.com. [Notes and Queries, Number 02, November 10, 1849] Reference
He is obliged once a year to make an ode in praise of St. Cecilia, who played so marvellously on the organ or psalterium that an angel descended from the ninth heaven to listen to her more conveniently — the harmony of the psaltery, in ascending from this place to the land of angels, necessarily losing a small portion of its volume. From Wordnik.com. [A Philosophical Dictionary] Reference
Of his later life nothing is known, but in an ancient psalterium at Vallombrosa his name is found in the. From Wordnik.com. [The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 12: Philip II-Reuss] Reference
Below, the lateral portions of the body of the fornix are joined by a thin triangular lamina, named the psalterium (lyra). From Wordnik.com. [IX. Neurology. 4c. The Fore-brain or Prosencephalon] Reference
Between the psalterium and the corpus callosum a horizontal cleft, the so-called ventricle of the fornix (ventricle of Verga), is sometimes found. From Wordnik.com. [IX. Neurology. 4c. The Fore-brain or Prosencephalon] Reference
The deerlets possess no psalterium or third stomach, except in a rudimentary form, and their feet approximate to those of the pigs, and they are destitute of horns. From Wordnik.com. [Natural History of the Mammalia of India and Ceylon] Reference
For the proprium temporis this is given in the Breviary (in the psalterium); on feasts it is the capitulum of None, with the addition of "Tu autem Domine miserere nobis". From Wordnik.com. [The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 9: Laprade-Mass Liturgy] Reference
Here it is well chewed, and, being thoroughly mixed with saliva passes back; on being swallowed in a soft pulpy state it passes the groove or valve communicating with the chamber from which it issued, and goes straight into the psalterium or manyplies, as the third chamber is called. From Wordnik.com. [Natural History of the Mammalia of India and Ceylon] Reference
About one-fourth of all the fibers of the fimbria are large projection fibers, the other three-fourths consist of fine commissural fibers which pass from the hippocampus of one side through the fimbria and hippocampal commissure (ventral psalterium or lyre), to the fimbria and hippocampus of the opposite side where they penetrate the pyramidal layer and terminate in the stratum radiatum. From Wordnik.com. [IX. Neurology. 4e. Composition and Central Connections of the Spinal Nerves] Reference
There’s a liturgical sound to our names for her stomachs—omasum, abomasum, reticulum—and in old words for these parts, you can hear a certain reverence: king’s-hood, the second stomach, and psalterium, the third. From Wordnik.com. [The Dirty Life] Reference
The psalterium or manyplies is wanting. From Wordnik.com. [Natural History of the Mammalia of India and Ceylon] Reference
Incipit psalterium Psalmos dauid primus. From Wordnik.com. [Catalogue of the William Loring Andrews Collection of Early Books in the Library of Yale University] Reference
431), he says: "In quinque siquidem volumina psalterium apud Hebraeos divisum est". From Wordnik.com. [The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 12: Philip II-Reuss] Reference
845) is one of the earliest and most famous of these, but there is also a similar manuscript which belonged to Charles the Bold now preserved at Paris and two very fine psalters of St. Gall, one of them known as the "psalterium aureum", the work of the famous scribe Sindram and belonging to the beginning of the tenth century. From Wordnik.com. [The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 12: Philip II-Reuss] Reference
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