Emungo wrote: [intrusive 'h'] Can't remember what OED says on the English word posthumous. But the Latin name (rarely attested praenomen, then much more common as a cognomen) is clearly just an archaic form of postimus, superlative of posterus, meaning 'last'. Obviously the only way (in most circs) you can be sure a child will be the last one to be born to a particular father
Johannes Picht schrieb: http://www.transports.equipement.gouv.fr/IMG/pdf/rapport_integral_cle1ca861.pdf Danke! "Lucius est rusticus" war halt doch irgendwie das falsche Lernprogramm. nennt für 2007 42,6 Mia. tkm, davon 40,6 für die SNCF. Stellen wir das ganze also mal sinnvoll um: Güterverkehr in Milliarden Tonnenkilometer D DB Andere
June 1st - St. Justin, Philosopher, Apologist, Martyr d. June 1, 167 Justin was born around 100 (both his birth and death dates are approximate) at Flavia Neapolis (ancient Shechem, modern Nablus) in Samaria (the middle portion of Israel, between Galilee and Judea) of pagan Greek parents. He was brought up with a good education in rhetoric, poetry, and history. He studied various schools
paux-courrouges schrieb: Nein, wir sind uns nicht einig, ich hätte mich übrigens davor gehütet, so ein' Quatsch anklingen zu lassen, weil die 2 MGV "Protozüge" zum Schnellfahren nur 12 To Achslast haben durften. Loks mit 12 Tonnen Achslast? Wow!!! Sehr deutsch, diese Behauptung! Darf ich fragen, welche Technik? Denn technisch geht es auch mit Kohlezügen auf Siegburg-Frankfurt
October 9th - St. Dionysius the Areopagite, and Comp., Martyrs (d. ca. 117) Of all the Roman missionaries sent into Gaul, Saint Dionysius or Denis the Areopagite, converted by Saint Paul in Athens, carried the Faith farthest into the west, fixing his see at Paris. France claims him as one of her greatest glories. He was a highly educated philosopher of Greece, and one of the nine archontes