See also: <span class="searchmatch">biturige</span> From Latin <span class="searchmatch">Bituriges</span>. <span class="searchmatch">Biturige</span> m or f by sense (plural <span class="searchmatch">Bituriges</span>) <span class="searchmatch">Biturige</span> (member of the <span class="searchmatch">Bituriges</span> Cubi or <span class="searchmatch">Bituriges</span> Vivisci, either...
<span class="searchmatch">Bituriges</span> m or f plural of <span class="searchmatch">Biturige</span> English Wikipedia has an article on: <span class="searchmatch">Bituriges</span> Wikipedia Gaulish tribal name, possibly meaning "kings of the world"...
(Classical Latin) IPA(key): [bɪˈtʊ.rɪ.ɡũː] (modern Italianate Ecclesiastical) IPA(key): [biˈt̪uː.ri.ɡum] Biturigum genitive plural of <span class="searchmatch">Biturigēs</span>...
Latin) IPA(key): [bɪ.tʊˈrɪ.ɡɪ.bʊs] (modern Italianate Ecclesiastical) IPA(key): [bi.t̪uˈriː.d͡ʒi.bus] Biturigibus dative/ablative plural of <span class="searchmatch">Biturigēs</span>...
confident that having taken that town, he would reduce the state of the <span class="searchmatch">Bituriges</span> under his dominion (Caesar, de Bello Gallico, VII, 13) First/second-declension...
fr Either from a Germanic derivative of German Burg or a Gallo-Latin pronunciation of <span class="searchmatch">Bituriges</span>. IPA(key): /buʁʒ/ Bourges f Bourges (a city in France)...
Burdegala Burdegalis Named after <span class="searchmatch">Bituriges</span> Vivisci, a Gaulish tribe in the area. The first word is said to mean kings of the world, from Proto-Celtic...
Avāricum n sg (genitive Avāricī); second declension The chief city of the <span class="searchmatch">Bituriges</span> in Aquitania, now Bourges Second-declension noun (neuter), with locative...
Noviodūnum n sg (genitive Noviodūnī); second declension A town of the <span class="searchmatch">Bituriges</span> in Gallia Aquitanica A town in Scythia Minor (today Isaccea, Romania)...
confident that having taken that town, he would reduce the state of the <span class="searchmatch">Bituriges</span> under (his) dominion. 29 BCE – 19 BCE, Virgil, Aeneid 1.553–554: “Sī datur...