Examples of using Strabo in English and their translations into Arabic
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Colloquial
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Ecclesiastic
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Ecclesiastic
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Computer
Strabo, your father wants to talk to you.
Strabo Pliny the Elder Claudius Ptolemy Plutarch Dio Cassius.
How did Strabo get in the trunk, Oz?
Tell Strabo I will send instructions in the morning.
Why don't you take your pal Strabo with you?
Strabo praised it as a wonder of the world.
We shall send Strabo along to make sure Antony behaves himself.
Writers like Herodotus, Plato, and Strabo never doubted their existence.
Strabo, was sentenced here as you are,
Ancient Greek historian Strabo visited Colossi in 20 BC, he described the sounds"like strikes.
(cheering) I didn't draw him, Strabo! You can't send me out there!
Strabo, … when you were fighting in the arena what did you think about the night before?
Other writers, such as Strabo, referred to the region as Coele-Syria("all Syria") around 10- 20 CE.
Strabo cautioned against the assumption that nature and actions of humans were determined by the physical environment they inhabited.
That sight you see on the table in front of you is the Strabo map of the entire road network of the Roman Empire at its zenith.
According to the testimony of the classical authors Herodotus(fifth century BC), Strabo(first century BC)
Strabo, in his description of Alexandria, describes Rhacotis as the home of Egyptian sentinels guarding the Nile.[9][2]
The Eburones(Greek:, Strabo), were a people who lived in the northeast of Gaul, in what is now the southern Netherlands, eastern Belgium, and the German Rhineland, in the period immediately before this region was conquered by Rome.
The Romans used to call the area of Sicily and coastal Southern Italy Magna Graecia("Great Greece"), since it was so densely inhabited by the Greeks; the ancient geographers differed on whether the term included Sicily or merely Apulia and Calabria- Strabo being the most prominent advocate of the wider definitions.
When Aelius Gallus set out with his army in 26 BC, he trusted to the guidance of a Nabataean called Syllaeus, who deceived and misled him. A long account of this interesting expedition through the desert is given by Strabo[7][8]- who derived most of his information about Arabia from Aelius Gallus himself, who was his friend.[ 9][ 10][ 11][ 12].