释义 |
[ mahr-shuhn ] / ˈmɑr ʃən /
nouna.d. 392?–457, emperor of the Eastern Roman Empire 450–457. Also Mar·ci·a·nus [mahr-shee-ey-nuhs, mahr-see‐]. /ˌmɑr ʃiˈeɪ nəs, ˌmɑr si‐/. Words nearby Marcianmarch-order, marchpane, march-past, march to a different beat, Marcia, Marcian, Marciano, Marcie, Marcion, Marcionism, Marcionite Dictionary.com UnabridgedBased on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2020 Example sentences from the Web for MarcianAnd somewhere or other among them Marcian, quite neglected, was sleeping. History of the Wars, Books III and IV (of 8)|Procopius He marched by a long circuit to the Marcian heights unnoticed by the enemy, and established his army behind them. Plutarch's Lives, Volume I (of 4)|Plutarch It runs parallel with the Claudian and the Marcian, near Rome, in some places being built out of their remains and on their piers. Rambles in Rome|S. Russell Forbes Marcian was bare of all other garments save his sacerdotal apparel. The Lives of the Saints, Volume 1 (of 16)|Sabine Baring-Gould
Of these, however, there is one which was built in Blachernæ, in the beginning of Marcian I's reign of divine memory. Primitive Christian Worship|James Endell Tyler
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