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Перевод: tarsus
[существительное] предплюсна ; лапка насекомого; волокнистый хрящ века; плюсна
Тезаурус:
- Each leg (Fig. 21) consists of the following parts - coxa, trochanter, femur, tibia and tarsus together with certain basal or articular sclerites and a terminal pretarsus.
- From Tarsus, Paul continues his missionary journey, which lasts some fourteen years and takes him across virtually the whole of the eastern Mediterranean world - not only throughout the Holy Land, but to Asia Minor as well, and across the sea to Greece.
- More usually it is divided into subsegments, typically five in number, but none of these has acquired muscles and movement of the tarsus as a whole is effected by levator and depressor muscles arising from the apex of the tibia.
- At its apex the tarsus bears a group of structures forming the pretarsus (Holway, 1935; Sarkaria and Patton, 1949; Dashman, 1953) which represents the terminal segment of the leg.
- Shortly after Stephen's death, Paul (still Saul of Tarsus at this point), prompted by a sadistic fanatical fervour, embarks for Damascus, in Syria, to ferret out Nazareans there.
- Under the name of Saul of Tarsus, a fanatical Sadducee or Sadducee instrument, he actively participates in attacks on the Nazarean Party in Jerusalem.
- Paul came from Tarsus, a town famed as a centre of learning and culture, to Jerusalem.
- As we have already noted, Stephen was stoned to death within a short time of the Crucifixion, and Saul of Tarsus was pursuing Nazareans in Damascus.
- The Tarsus consists primitively of a single segment, a feature which is present in the Protura, Diplura and in some larvae.
- A more radical position, at least in principle, was held by the most prominent figure (though not the originator) of the Gentile mission - Saul or Paul of Tarsus, a Hellenized Jew with Roman citizenship.
- They include the levator and depressor of the trochanter, tibia and tarsus and the levator of the pretarsus.
- But he is accorded some sort of grudging acceptance by "James, the brother of the Lord", who dispatches him to Tarsus, to preach there.
- Like Paul of Tarsus, Augustine of Hippo was a convert to Christianity, having previously been a Manichee and then a Neoplatonist like Plotinus.
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