Meaning of vocabularium | Babel Free
Definitions
Vocabulary.
countable, humorous, often, rare, uncountable
Examples
“I therefore want to know if a captain of volunteers is justified in applying to his superior officer language unbecoming an officer and a gentleman? If he is, then I would suggest that a regulation vocabulary should be served out to the whole force, so that officers and men may know the class of language an officer may be justified in applying to those of superior or inferior rank to himself. This would prevent a surprise, and all branches of the service would thoroughly comprehend the nature of orders given, no matter how much vocabularium, rhetoric or polite word-painting the most learned officer may lavish upon them in discharge of his arduous duties.”
““This,” said Mr. Esking, with a sly smile, “is a very early transcript of Archbishop Alfric’s vocabularium, and this other is sent to me by a friend at Brussels, who believes it to be that copy of the same work which was in possession of Rubens, the painter, missing ever since his death.””
“Bishop, the mind reader, is in delicate health. Trying to raise Bostonese thoughts out of the rubbish of the metaphysico-techical^([sic]) vocabularium did it.”
“After perusing many of the horse vocabulariums through and through they at last decided upon the mascot name that will carry her safely to the front—they christened her “Daylight,” and we will look anxiously after her future record as though we held a half interest.”
“What Webster fails to describe to the possibilities of the game: It strengthens the leg muscles, improves the eyesight, induces deep breathing, tends to work off superfluous flesh and limbers up the vocabulary; it is especially good for the latter—after making one round with Frank and Dave we are forced to admit that their vocabularium is greatly improved, and should either of them lose their present situation they could qualify for a first-class mule skinner or a dock foreman.”
“The Villanova library has two editions of the famous dictionary or vocabularium of Ambrose Calepini, an Austin Friar and lexicographer, who was born in 1435 and died in 1511. One impression is the work of Paulus Manutius, a noted scholar and printer of the Sixteenth Century. The book was printed in Rome in 1570, and it gives the vocabularium in five languages—Latin, Greek, French, Italian and Spanish. It is a folio bound in stamped pigskin over beechboards. The second book was printed in Vasle in 1582. This vocabularium was a recognized authority for the languages of Europe in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries.”
“Kansas is bleeding from every pore of her vocabularium. Sharp’s rifles are discharging from the well-known Emporium of White & Son, unlimited, and Bibles are closed until after election.”
“I know what I mean and you needn’t be statirical about it. It’s proper to use words and improve your vocabularium. Anyway I don’t use slang words like you! And I don’t whistle either, it’s so boyish.”
“LEGALIS SECRETARIUS. $475 + / Fee paid. Extremely capable and mature. Shorthand and typing. Must have a vocabularium of legalis terminus. SPEER PERSONNEL, 322 Amer. Bldg., 372-8210.”
“However, except for the book's merciless shredding of the various critical vocabularia it imitates, there's no deconstructionism, or at least nothing I recognized as such -- hell (tm), there's not even any feminism.”
“Some Remarks on a Humanist Vocabularium […] This section is followed by a thematic Greek-Latin word list of tree names (ff. 298ʳᵛ), and then by a Latin-Greek vocabulary list (ff. 299ʳ–320ʳ). […] The main focus of this paper is the extensive Greek-Latin vocabularium, the edition of which is in progress now. […] In this Vocabularium, the Greek lemmas and their Latin equivalents were not transcribed line by line from the source text: instead, the Greek column was copied first and the Latin one thereafter. […] For an analysis of how Janus himself used his vocabularium in his translations, see L. Horváth, Eine vergessene (s. n. 7), 199–215.”
Austrian Academy of Sciences Press
CEFR level
C1
Advanced
This word is part of the CEFR C1 vocabulary — advanced level.
This word is part of the CEFR C1 vocabulary — advanced level.