stemma


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  • noun

Synonyms for stemma

a tree diagram showing a reconstruction of the transmission of manuscripts of a literary work

Related Words

an eye having a single lens

Based on WordNet 3.0, Farlex clipart collection. © 2003-2012 Princeton University, Farlex Inc.
References in periodicals archive ?
Seventeen oaths of Hippocratic stemma were studied when analyzing the prohibition of administering poisonous/deadly drugs.
"Les Stemmas du Charroi de Nimes et de la Prise d'Orange." Dans Guillaume d'Orange.
The cuticle above each stemma usually forms a biconvex corneal (cuticular) lens exterior to the crystalline cone and the various stemmatal sensory components of the cranial interior (5), (6).
Jonathan Evans, in an elegant yet densely argued essay, rounds off this section by considering words, things, and truth; Tolkien's primary image of the Tree of Tales, the wisdom of Treebeard the Ent in Lord of the Rings, the Old English pun on treo (tree) and treow (truth, faith) to which Shippey calls attention in Poems of Wisdom and Learning in Old English (Cambridge: Brewer, 1976), the tree-diagrams of the philological stemma and the close interconnection between narrative invention and linguistic imagination.
If the manuscript tradition is "closed" (i.e., a clear genealogical relationship can be determined), then a stemma should be used.
Marco Ruffini intraprende questo studio scegliendo di analizzare lo stemma araldico della famiglia papale che, come definisce l'autore stesso, puo essere inteso come vera e propria <<segnaletica politica>>.
Connections are central to all of the articles, whether focused on connections between text and image, male monks and female monks, individual manuscripts and textual stemma, or reform houses and one another.
The second is devoted entirely to a description of the manuscripts and the creation of a tentative two-page stemma (pp.
One roundel shows a funeral procession in which confraternity members carry a coffin marked with the Misericordia's stemma. The medallions on Mercy's vestments are arranged in rows, much like the roundels that decorated the pages of early thirteenth-century moralized Bibles.
The filiations may be summarized in a stemma, shown in Figure 8.
Stemma Press, 1938 Bowsens Lane, Woodbury, MN 55125.