释义 |
▪ I. tabulary, n. Rom. Antiq.|ˈtæbjʊlərɪ| [ad. L. tabulārium a record-office, archives, f. tabula table, tablet: see -arium.] A place where the public records were kept in ancient Rome; hence, in other places.
1656Blount Glossogr., Tabulary, a chest or place wherein Registers, or Evidences are kept in a City; the Chancery or Exchequer office. 1835–8S. R. Maitland Dark Ages xii. (1844) 196 The charter cited..from the tabulary of the monastery of St. Maur. 1868in W. Smith Dict. Grk. & Rom. Antiq. ▪ II. ˈtabulary, a. Now rare. [ad. L. tabulār-is, f. tabula table: see -ary2.] 1. Of, pertaining to, contained in, or of the nature of a table: = tabular 2 a, b.
1594Blundevil Exerc. ii. (1636) 130 Then subtract the lesser tabulary Sine from the greater. 1674S. Jeake Arith. (1696) 104 [The Obolus] is all one with the Sextans, according to the Tabulary Division. 1865Carlyle Fredk. Gt. xxi. ii. (1873) IX. 268 Much documentary and tabulary raw-material. †2. ? Pictorial. Obs. rare.
1716M. Davies Athen. Brit. III. 106 Whereunto Fabretti appendicularizes a Tabulary Representation of the Destruction of Troy, and a Description of Fucinus, now call'd the Lake of Celano in the Kingdom of Naples. †3. Made or recorded upon a ‘table’ or tablet.
1716M. Davies Athen. Brit. VI. Diss. Physick 29 Even the Original Prescriptions of King Mithridates..were..thought to be owing chiefly to some of those Empyrical Recipe's recorded in those tabulary Experiences. |