Concept cluster: History > Rome or Roman
adj
Of or relating to St Ambrose.
n
A native or inhabitant of Ancient Rome.
adj
(archaic, religion) Anglican
adj
(literature) Pertaining to the Roman poetic literature during this time.
n
one of the seven hills on which ancient Rome was built
adj
(obsolete) Pertaining to Rome and papal power.
adj
Of or pertaining to the House of Borgia, a Valencian-Italian noble family who became prominent during the Renaissance.
adj
of or relating to the aristocratic Borromeo family of Northern Italy.
adj
(Roman Catholicism) Pertaining to the Camaldolese Order of Italy.
n
(historical) The temple of Jupiter on the Capitoline Hill in ancient Rome.
adj
Capitoline; relating to the Capitol in Ancient Rome.
adj
Of or relating to the Capitol in Ancient Rome.
n
The Capitol. A citadel of Rome.
adj
(historical) Of or relating to the Swedish kings Charles XI and Charles XII.
adj
Of or relating to Edward Hyde, 1st Earl of Clarendon.
adj
Of or pertaining to the ancient Greeks and Romans, especially to Greek or Roman authors of the highest rank, or of the period when their best literature was produced; of or pertaining to places inhabited by the ancient Greeks and Romans, or rendered famous by their deeds.
n
The largest stadium in the Roman empire, located near the center of Rome.
adj
Relating to Constantinople (modern-day Istanbul).
adj
of or relating to William Cureton, and specifically the Egyptian manuscripts recognised as Syriac Gospels, edited and published, by the assistant keeper of manuscripts at the British Museum, William Cureton in 1858.
adj
Of or pertaining to the czar or the czarina.
adj
Relating to the dauphin of France.
adj
Of or relating to Erromango.
n
A nickname for the city of Rome.
n
Anatole France, a French poet, journalist, and novelist.
adj
Relating to Gallicanism.
adj
Pertaining to the period of Roman rule in Gaul, 50 BC–486 AD.
adj
Of or pertaining to Greek or Roman culture.
n
(uncountable, figuratively, colloquial) Synonym of gibberish, used for foreign speech or text, technical jargon, or advanced subjects.
n
A metonym for a person
n
Greek philosophy.
n
The condition of a helot.
adj
Of or relating to Saint Jerome.
adj
(archaic) Of or pertaining to the Jacobites.
adj
Of or relating to Saint Jerome.
adj
Of or pertaining to Justin I.
n
Language characteristic of the writer Rudyard Kipling (1865-1936), characterised by realism, jingoism, etc.
n
An attitude or turn of phrase characteristic of Rudyard Kipling.
n
A church and palace in Rome; used attributively to describe several councils and treaties
adj
Of or relating to the customs and people descended from the ancient Romans and their Empire.
n
A liturgy of any Christian church, spoken in Latin.
n
(more precisely) The script (set of symbols) rooted in the Latin alphabet of ancient Rome and adapted over the centuries to form the alphabets of scores of other languages; like Cyrillic script, it corresponds to a family of alphabets rather than a single alphabet.
adj
Relating to Lorenzo de' Medici, or to the Laurentian Library in Florence named after him.
adj
Of or relating to Gaius Marius, Ancient Roman general and statesman.
adj
Of or relating to the Mariavite Church.
n
Dated spelling of medievaldom.
n
(historical) An Ancient Roman town or city.
adj
Alternative form of Napoleonian [Of or relating to Napoleon Bonaparte.]
adj
Of or relating to Nuremberg in Germany.
adj
Of or relating to the fictional Land of Oz, introduced in the book The Wonderful Wizard of Oz (1900) by L. Frank Baum.
n
One of the seven hills of Rome; the site of the earliest settlement.
n
(historical, Ancient Rome) The long period of relative peace and minimal expansion by military force experienced by the Roman Empire between 27 BCE and 180 CE.
n
Alternative form of Petliurite [(historical, politics) A follower of Symon Petliura.]
adj
Of or pertaining to people named Peter, particularly Saint Peter or Peter the Great.
adj
(Ancient Rome) Of or relating to the pretorium in an ancient Roman camp.
n
The study of Alexander Pushkin.
adj
Relating to the Ratzinger family from Bavaria, whose members include Pope Benedict XVI.
n
(historical) A catalogue of monuments and buildings in ancient Rome, produced from a survey.
adj
Of or relating to César Ritz, Swiss hotelier, or the luxurious Ritz hotel chain he founded.
adj
(proofreading) Abbreviation of roman. [(of type, typography) upright, as opposed to italic.]
adj
(largely obsolete) Of or pertaining to the eastern Roman Empire, that is, to the Byzantine Empire.
n
Alternative letter-case form of romaji [A representation of Japanese in Latin script.]
adj
(of text, computing) of or related to the Latin alphabet.
n
A type of brick originating in Ancient Rome and spread by the Romans to the lands they conquered.
n
The form of script used in ancient Rome until about the 3rd century AD for Latin handwriting.
n
(historical, now rare) The Holy Roman Empire.
n
A form of public entertainment characterized by violence, degradation and suffering.
n
The legal system of Ancient Rome.
n
Alternative letter-case form of Roman Question [(historical) The political dispute between the Italian government and the Roman Catholic Church, which lasted from 1861 to 1929, concerning control of Rome.]
n
(historical) A French puppet state which existed from 1798 to 1799 in what was previously the Papal States.
n
The Latin rite used by the Roman Catholic Church.
n
The form of writing used in ancient Rome for inscriptions.
n
(archaic) One who romances; a romancer or romanticist.
adj
Somewhat resembling the Roman; applied sometimes to the debased style of the later Roman Empire, but especially to the more developed art and architecture prevailing from the 8th century to the 12th.
adj
Of or relating to Rome or its people.
adj
(archaic) Pertaining to Roman Catholicism.
n
(chiefly derogatory) The tenets of the Church of Rome; the Roman Catholic religion.
n
(often derogatory) A Roman Catholic.
n
(law) The study of Roman law.
n
One who Romanizes.
adv
In a Roman manner; like a person from (Ancient) Rome.
n
The quality or state of being Roman.
adj
(architecture) Of or relating to an early medieval style of architecture in which Byzantine and Western elements are combined.
adj
Of or relating to the system of civil law.
adj
Of or relating to Romanology.
n
One who has a love of Ancient Rome.
adj
Having a love of Ancient Rome.
n
(rare) A love of Ancient Rome.
n
One who fears, hates, or is prejudiced against Rome or the Romans (especially Ancient Rome or the Roman Empire, or sometimes the Roman Catholic Church and Pope in Rome).
n
Ancient Rome; the former Roman Empire; Roman civilization.
n
Alternative form of Rome rule [(derogatory, chiefly historical) The control of an autonomous or independent Ireland by the Pope and the Catholic Church, as claimed by Protestant unionists.]
n
Alternative spelling of Rum-ville [(obsolete, Britain, thieves' cant) London, England.]
n
Alternative form of Romescot [(historical) An alms-fee.]
adj
Tending or directed toward Rome, or toward the Roman Catholic church.
n
A phonetic alphabet based on the Roman alphabet; a precursor of the International Phonetic Alphabet.
adj
Belonging or relating to Rome.
n
A Roman Catholic.
n
(religion) a neopagan religion from Lithuania that practices reconstructions of the ancient Baltic polytheistic religion.
adj
Of or relating to the Persian poet and mystic Rumi (Jalāl ad-Dīn Muhammad Rūmī).
adj
Of or pertaining to a Roman Catholic missionary society called the Salesians founded by Saint Francis of Sales in Turin.
adj
Of, by, or pertaining to the Senate of Ancient Rome.
n
A festival celebrated by the inhabitants of the seven hills where Rome would be founded.
adj
Of, pertaining to, or designating the edition or text of the Vulgate (1592, corrected in 1593 and 1598), correcting that of Pope Sixtus V (r. 1585–90), which was revised on the orders of Pope Clement VIII (r. 1592–1605).
adj
Pertaining to one or more of the Roman senators bearing the name Statilius.
adj
Of or relating to the Chinese philosopher Sunzi.
adj
Of or relating to Trajan (53–117 AD), emperor of Ancient Rome from 98 AD until his death.
n
Alternative form of Waldensian [One who holds the doctrines of the Waldenses (a pre-Protestant church founded by Peter Waldo).]
n
(for short) Vatican City, a city-state in Southern Europe, an enclave within the city of Rome, Italy.
adj
Of or relating to the Vatican.
n
(uncommon, informal) A person from Vatican City.
n
One who practices or studies Vaticanology.
n
The literary style of the Ancient Roman writer Virgil.
adj
Of, pertaining to, or resembling the Roman god Vulcan.
adj
Of, pertaining to, or characteristic of Noah Webster (1758-1843), American lexicographer and spelling reformer.
adj
Of or pertaining to Brooke Foss Westcott (1825–1901), English churchman, theologian, and Bishop of Durham.

Note: Concept clusters like the one above are an experimental OneLook feature. We've grouped words and phrases into thousands of clusters based on a statistical analysis of how they are used in writing. Some of the words and concepts may be vulgar or offensive. The names of the clusters were written automatically and may not precisely describe every word within the cluster; furthermore, the clusters may be missing some entries that you'd normally associate with their names. Click on a word to look it up on OneLook.
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