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PLUTUS OPERA

  • Plutus (opera)
  • Opera by Charles Lecocq

    Plutus is a three-act opéra comique by Charles Lecocq, with a libretto by Albert Millaud and Gaston Jollivet. It was first presented at the Opéra-Comique

    Plutus (opera)

    Plutus (opera)

    Plutus_(opera)

  • Plutus (disambiguation)
  • Topics referred to by the same term

    Look up Plutus in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. Plutus is the Greek god of wealth. It may also refer to: Plutus (opera), a three-act opéra comique

    Plutus (disambiguation)

    Plutus_(disambiguation)

  • List of operas and operettas by Charles Lecocq
  • complete list of the operas and operettas of the French composer Charles Lecocq (1832–1918). Lecocq wrote 21 opéras comiques, 12 opéras bouffes, eight opérettes

    List of operas and operettas by Charles Lecocq

    List_of_operas_and_operettas_by_Charles_Lecocq

  • The Queen of Spades (opera)
  • 1890 opera by Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky

    (Russian: Пиковая дама, Pikovaya dama listen, French: La Dame de Pique) is an opera in three acts (seven scenes) by Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky to a Russian libretto

    The Queen of Spades (opera)

    The Queen of Spades (opera)

    The_Queen_of_Spades_(opera)

  • L'Égyptienne (Lecocq)
  • public, and produced in rapid succession L'Amour et son Carquois (1868), ... Plutus (1886); Les Grenadiers de Mont-Cornette and Ali-Baba (1887); La Volière

    L'Égyptienne (Lecocq)

    L'Égyptienne (Lecocq)

    L'Égyptienne_(Lecocq)

  • Albert Millaud
  • French journalist and writer (1844–1892)

    1872: Le Péché véniel, one-act verse play 1873: Plutus in collaboration with Gaston Jollivet (later an opéra comique, see below) 1877: La Farce de la femme

    Albert Millaud

    Albert Millaud

    Albert_Millaud

  • Polyphemus
  • Son of Poseidon and Thoosa in Greek mythology

    it must be prior to 388 BC, when Aristophanes parodied it in his comedy Plutus (Wealth); and probably after 406 BC, when Dionysius I became tyrant of Syracuse

    Polyphemus

    Polyphemus

    Polyphemus

  • Xavier Leroux
  • French composer

    under the pseudonym Meyrianne Héglon (1867–1942). The Persians (Aeschylus) Plutus (Aristophanes) Evangéline (Louis de Gramont) (1895) Astarté (Louis de Gramont)

    Xavier Leroux

    Xavier Leroux

    Xavier_Leroux

  • Le Jour et la Nuit (opera)
  • 1881 opera by Charles lecocq

    la Nuit (French pronunciation: [lə ʒuʁ e la nɥi], Day and Night) is an opéra-bouffe with a libretto by Albert Vanloo and Eugène Leterrier and music by

    Le Jour et la Nuit (opera)

    Le Jour et la Nuit (opera)

    Le_Jour_et_la_Nuit_(opera)

  • Le Cœur et la Main
  • Three-act opéra comique by Charles Lecocq

    Le Cœur et la Main (French for 'The Heart and the Hand') is a three-act opéra comique with music by Charles Lecocq and words by Charles Nuitter and Alexandre

    Le Cœur et la Main

    Le Cœur et la Main

    Le_Cœur_et_la_Main

  • Charles Lecocq
  • French composer (1832–1918)

    style of composition less popular. His few serious works include the opera Plutus (1886), which was not a success, and the ballet Le Cygne (1899). His

    Charles Lecocq

    Charles Lecocq

    Charles_Lecocq

  • Kosiki
  • 1876 opéra comique

    Kosiki is an opéra comique in three acts, with music by Charles Lecocq and words by William Busnach and Armand Liorat. It was first produced at the Théâtre

    Kosiki

    Kosiki

    Kosiki

  • Lysistrata
  • Comedy by Aristophanes

    Aristophanes (1924). The Lysistrata, The Thesmophoriazusae, The Ecclesiazusae, The Plutus. Translated by Rogers, Benjamin Bickley. Cambridge, MA: Harward University

    Lysistrata

    Lysistrata

    Lysistrata

  • La Camargo (opera)
  • Opéra comique by Charles Lecocq, Eugène Leterrier and Albert Vanloo

    La Camargo is a 3-act opéra comique with music by Charles Lecocq and words by Eugène Leterrier and Albert Vanloo. It is a highly fictionalised story of

    La Camargo (opera)

    La Camargo (opera)

    La_Camargo_(opera)

  • Ninette (opera)
  • Opéra comique by Charles Lecocq

    Ninette is an opéra comique in three acts, with music by Charles Lecocq and words by Charles Clairville Jr, Eugène Hubert, G. Lebeaut and Ch. de Trogoff

    Ninette (opera)

    Ninette (opera)

    Ninette_(opera)

  • Pluto (mythology)
  • God in Greek mythology

    "Wealth," appears in the Theogony as the child of Demeter and Iasion: "fine Plutus, who goes upon the whole earth and the broad back of the sea, and whoever

    Pluto (mythology)

    Pluto (mythology)

    Pluto_(mythology)

  • Cornucopia
  • Mythological symbol of abundance, also called the horn of plenty

    abundance, such as personifications of Earth (Gaia or Terra); the child Plutus, god of riches and son of the grain goddess Demeter; the nymph Maia; and

    Cornucopia

    Cornucopia

    Cornucopia

  • Giroflé-Girofla
  • Opera composed by Charles Lecocq

    Giroflé-Girofla is an opéra bouffe in three acts with music by Charles Lecocq. The French libretto was by Albert Vanloo and Eugène Leterrier. The story

    Giroflé-Girofla

    Giroflé-Girofla

    Giroflé-Girofla

  • La Belle au bois dormant (Lecocq)
  • 1900 opéra comique in three acts

    La Belle au bois dormant (The Sleeping Beauty in the Woods) is an opéra comique in three acts with music by Charles Lecocq and words by Albert Vanloo

    La Belle au bois dormant (Lecocq)

    La Belle au bois dormant (Lecocq)

    La_Belle_au_bois_dormant_(Lecocq)

  • Fleur-de-Thé
  • 1868 operetta by Charles Lecocq

    Fleur-de-Thé (French pronunciation: [flœʁ də te], Teaflower) is a three-act opéra bouffe with music by Charles Lecocq and words by Alfred Duru and Henri Chivot

    Fleur-de-Thé

    Fleur-de-Thé

    Fleur-de-Thé

  • Franz Ritter
  • German classical philologist

    Berlin, receiving his doctorate in 1828 with a dissertation on Aristophanes' Plutus. In 1829 he obtained his habilitation at the University of Bonn, where in

    Franz Ritter

    Franz_Ritter

  • La Fille de Madame Angot
  • Opéra comique by Charles Lecocq

    (French pronunciation: [la fij də madam ɑ̃ɡo]; Madame Angot's Daughter) is an opéra comique in three acts by Charles Lecocq with words by Clairville, Paul Siraudin

    La Fille de Madame Angot

    La Fille de Madame Angot

    La_Fille_de_Madame_Angot

  • 1886 in music
  • González [es] - La Gran Vía Spyros Samaras - Flora mirabilis Charles Lecocq - Plutus Edward Solomon - Pepita; or, the Girl with the Glass Eyes Adonis, London

    1886 in music

    1886_in_music

  • Inferno (opera)
  • Opera with music by Lucia Ronchetti

    Inferno is an opera based on Dante's Divine Comedy with music by Lucia Ronchetti. The libretto mostly by the composer uses much of Dante's poetry. Commissioned

    Inferno (opera)

    Inferno (opera)

    Inferno_(opera)

  • La Petite Mariée
  • 1875 opéra-bouffe by Charles Lecocq

    (French pronunciation: [la pətit maʁje]; The Little Bride) is a three-act opéra-bouffe, with music by Charles Lecocq and libretto by Eugène Leterrier and

    La Petite Mariée

    La Petite Mariée

    La_Petite_Mariée

  • Gabriel Soulacroix
  • French operatic baritone

    an exemplary bel canto technique". Ferdinand in Egmont (Salvayre,1886) Plutus (Lecocq, 1886) Gabriel in Pilote (Urich, 1890) Clément Marot in La Basoche

    Gabriel Soulacroix

    Gabriel Soulacroix

    Gabriel_Soulacroix

  • Les élémens
  • Les Élémens (The Elements), or Ballet des élémens, is an opéra-ballet by the French composers André Cardinal Destouches and Michel Richard Delalande (or

    Les élémens

    Les élémens

    Les_élémens

  • Ludvig Holberg
  • Danish–Norwegian writer, philosopher and historian (1684–1754)

    honest/honourable ambition) Den Forvandlede Brudgom, 1753 (Eng. The Changed Bridegroom) Plutus eller Proces imellom Fattigdom og Riigdom, publ. 1753 Husspøgelse eller

    Ludvig Holberg

    Ludvig Holberg

    Ludvig_Holberg

  • Ali-Baba (Lecocq)
  • Ali-Baba is an opéra comique in three acts, first produced in 1887, with music by Charles Lecocq. The French libretto based on the familiar tale from

    Ali-Baba (Lecocq)

    Ali-Baba (Lecocq)

    Ali-Baba_(Lecocq)

  • List of compositions by Darius Milhaud
  • and percussion; André de Richaud translation of the drama by Euripides Plutus, Op. 186 (1938); for voice and orchestra; Simone Jollivet translation of

    List of compositions by Darius Milhaud

    List of compositions by Darius Milhaud

    List_of_compositions_by_Darius_Milhaud

  • La Marjolaine
  • Opéra bouffe by Charles Lecocq

    La Marjolaine is an opéra bouffe in three acts, with music by Charles Lecocq and words by Eugène Leterrier and Albert Vanloo, the third collaboration

    La Marjolaine

    La Marjolaine

    La_Marjolaine

  • Le Petit Duc
  • Opéra comique in three acts by Charles Lecocq

    Little Duke) is an opéra comique in three acts by Charles Lecocq. The French libretto was by Henri Meilhac and Ludovic Halévy. The opera was first presented

    Le Petit Duc

    Le Petit Duc

    Le_Petit_Duc

  • Miser
  • Person who is reluctant to spend

    is the more prudent course. It was followed by John Gay's "The Miser and Plutus", published in his collection of fables in 1737. A miser frightened for

    Miser

    Miser

    Miser

  • La Roussotte
  • 1881 French vaudeville-opérette

    (Alexandre) Charles", vol. 2, pp. 1119–1120, in The New Grove Dictionary of Opera, 4 volumes, edited by Stanley Sadie. London: Macmillan. ISBN 9781561592289

    La Roussotte

    La Roussotte

    La_Roussotte

  • Les Cent Vierges
  • Opérette in three acts with music by Charles Lecocq

    the Second Empire, Jacques Offenbach had dominated the sphere of comic opera in France, and Lecocq had struggled for recognition. Defeat in the Franco-Prussian

    Les Cent Vierges

    Les Cent Vierges

    Les_Cent_Vierges

  • Hermann Wiedemann
  • German operatic baritone (1879–1944

    at the Hamburg State Opera, and from 1913 at the Berlin Court Opera. His guest appearances began in 1907 at the Dresden Court Opera and in 1909 at the Bavarian

    Hermann Wiedemann

    Hermann Wiedemann

    Hermann_Wiedemann

  • Aristophanes
  • Classical Athenian comic playwright (c. 446 – c. 386 BC)

    (Ἐκκλησιάζουσαι Ekklesiazousai), c. 392 BC Wealth (Πλοῦτος Ploutos; Latin Plutus) second version, 388 BC The standard modern edition of the fragments is

    Aristophanes

    Aristophanes

    Aristophanes

  • Kratos (mythology)
  • Personification of strength in Greek mythology

    Prometheus for his own play Prometheus Unbound. In Gabriel Fauré's three-act opera Prométhée, first performed in 1900 with a French libretto written by the

    Kratos (mythology)

    Kratos (mythology)

    Kratos_(mythology)

  • Mam'zelle Angot
  • One-act ballet in three scenes

    music is by Charles Lecocq. The plot is broadly based on Lecocq's 1872 opéra bouffe, La Fille de Madame Angot. Massine had previously created ballets

    Mam'zelle Angot

    Mam'zelle_Angot

  • House of Medici
  • Italian banking family and political dynasty

    sciences. They funded the invention of the piano, and arguably that of opera. They were also protagonists of the Counter-Reformation,[citation needed]

    House of Medici

    House of Medici

    House_of_Medici

  • Hermaphroditus
  • Figure in Greek mythology

    now-lost third century BC Greek tragedy by Posidippus. The 1639 Italian opera La Delia features Hermaphroditus as a comedic minor character serving a

    Hermaphroditus

    Hermaphroditus

    Hermaphroditus

  • Étienne Troy
  • French opera singer

    (also singing in the 500th performance in January 1905), a wine grower in Plutus in 1886, Caylus in le Roi malgré lui in 1887, Mauclerc in l’Escadron volant

    Étienne Troy

    Étienne_Troy

  • List of lost literary works
  • Babylonians (426 BC) The Clouds (first version 423 BC) Amphiaraus (414 BC) Plutus (first version 408 BC) Cocalus (387 BC) Aiolosicon (387 BC) Speusippus (c

    List of lost literary works

    List_of_lost_literary_works

  • 1728 in literature
  • Masques John Gay – The Beggar's Opera Pierre de Marivaux – Le Trionphe de Plutus John Mottley – The Craftsman Penelope (opera) Alexis Piron – Les Fils ingrats

    1728 in literature

    1728 in literature

    1728_in_literature

  • Le Cygne (ballet)
  • Ballet composed by Charles Lecocq

    Catulle Mendès, and music by Charles Lecocq. It was first staged at the Opéra-Comique, Paris on 20 April 1899. It is loosely based on the classical myth

    Le Cygne (ballet)

    Le Cygne (ballet)

    Le_Cygne_(ballet)

  • Conrad Gessner
  • Swiss physician, bibliographer and naturalist (1516–1565)

    studied classical languages, appearing as Penia (Poverty) in Aristophanes' Plutus, at the age of 15. In school, he impressed his teachers so much that a few

    Conrad Gessner

    Conrad Gessner

    Conrad_Gessner

  • Attis
  • Phrygian and Greek god

    Jean-Baptiste Lully, who was attached to Louis XIV's court, composed an opera titled Atys. In 1780, Niccolo Piccinni composed his own Atys. Oscar Wilde

    Attis

    Attis

    Attis

  • Prothyraia
  • Deity addressed in the Orphic Hymns

    ISBN 8804476613. Rudhardt, Jean, "Recherches sur les Hymnes orphiques", in Opera inedita: Essai sur la religion grecque & Recherches sur les Hymnes orphiques

    Prothyraia

    Prothyraia

    Prothyraia

  • Benedicta Boccoli
  • Italian theater and movie actress

    Mirabella - 2004 Stalker of Rebecca Gillmann, dir Marcello Cotugno - 2004 Plutus of Aristofanes, with Maurizio Micheli, dir Michele Mirabella - 2004 Cactus

    Benedicta Boccoli

    Benedicta Boccoli

    Benedicta_Boccoli

  • Pasithea
  • One of the Graces in Greek mythology

    Murray, A.T. Harvard University Press. English translation. Homer, Homeri Opera in five volumes. Oxford, Oxford University Press. 1920. ISBN 978-0198145318

    Pasithea

    Pasithea

    Pasithea

  • Gelos (mythology)
  • Personification of laughter in Greek mythology

    Project. Philostratus the Lemnian (Philostratus Major), Flavii Philostrati Opera. Vol 2. Carl Ludwig Kayser. in aedibus B. G. Teubneri. Lipsiae. 1871. Greek

    Gelos (mythology)

    Gelos_(mythology)

  • Ioke (mythology)
  • Greek mythological figure

    ISBN 978-0674995796. Online version at the Perseus Digital Library. Homer, Homeri Opera in five volumes. Oxford, Oxford University Press. 1920. ISBN 978-0198145318

    Ioke (mythology)

    Ioke_(mythology)

  • AnimaniA Awards
  • Annual German awards for anime & manga

    Revengers by Ken Wakui Best Manga Internatuonal: Shojo/Josei Who Made Me a Princess by Plutus and Spoon Best Manga International: Boys Love BJ Alex by Mingwa

    AnimaniA Awards

    AnimaniA_Awards

  • Gujarati theatre
  • Indian Theatre

    Laxmi Natak by Dalpatram in 1850, it was inspired by ancient Greek comedy Plutus by Aristophanes. In the year 1852, a Parsi theatre group performed a Shakespearean

    Gujarati theatre

    Gujarati_theatre

  • Grande Prêmio Cruzeiro do Sul
  • Brazilian horse race

    designates a filly 1883: Mascotte II ƒ 1884: Sylvia II ƒ 1885: Sybilla ƒ 1887: Plutus 1888: Cupidon 1889: My Boy 1890: Hamleto 1891: Hercules 1892: Hermit 1893:

    Grande Prêmio Cruzeiro do Sul

    Grande_Prêmio_Cruzeiro_do_Sul

  • List of French haute-contre roles
  • hautes-contre of the 17th and 18th centuries, or at least those to be found in operas by the major composers of the same period. The table was compiled by collating

    List of French haute-contre roles

    List_of_French_haute-contre_roles

  • Wedding of Frederick V of the Palatinate and Princess Elizabeth
  • 1613 wedding in London, England

    the resort of baboons. Plutus the deity of wealth spoke, and the rock opened. The Priests sang and a gold mine was revealed. Plutus compared rocks to flinty-hearted

    Wedding of Frederick V of the Palatinate and Princess Elizabeth

    Wedding of Frederick V of the Palatinate and Princess Elizabeth

    Wedding_of_Frederick_V_of_the_Palatinate_and_Princess_Elizabeth

  • Palaestra (mythology)
  • Figure in Greek mythology

    Project. Philostratus the Lemnian (Philostratus Major), Flavii Philostrati Opera. Vol 2. Carl Ludwig Kayser. in aedibus B. G. Teubneri. Lipsiae. 1871. Greek

    Palaestra (mythology)

    Palaestra_(mythology)

  • Deaths in November 2010
  • Alzheimer's disease. Theodore W. Kheel, 96, American labor negotiator. Karl Plutus, 106, Estonian jurist and centenarian. Noah Augustine, 39, Canadian indigenous

    Deaths in November 2010

    Deaths_in_November_2010

  • Kydoimos
  • Personification of the noise of battle in ancient Greece

    ISBN 978-0674995796. Online version at the Perseus Digital Library. Homer, Homeri Opera in five volumes. Oxford, Oxford University Press. 1920. ISBN 978-0198145318

    Kydoimos

    Kydoimos

  • Theatre of France
  • ancient models (Pierre de Ronsard translated a part of Aristophanes's "Plutus" at college), on the whole the French comedic tradition shows a great deal

    Theatre of France

    Theatre_of_France

  • International Festival of Ancient Greek Drama, Cyprus
  • base country Electra Euripides Radu Stanca National Theatre Sibiu Romania Plutus Aristophanes Cyprus Theatre Organisation Nicosia Cyprus The Birds Aristophanes

    International Festival of Ancient Greek Drama, Cyprus

    International_Festival_of_Ancient_Greek_Drama,_Cyprus

  • European Cultural Centre of Delphi
  • Venue in Delphi, Greece

    others. Cooperation with Greek organisations: National Theatre, National Opera, National Theatre of Northern Greece, Art Theatre-Karolos Koun, Spyros Evangelatos

    European Cultural Centre of Delphi

    European_Cultural_Centre_of_Delphi

  • Plays with incidental music
  • Brinsley Sheridan, 1799) music by Jan Ladislav Dussek (with Michael Kelly) Plutus (Jollivet, after Aristophanes, 380 BC) 1938 music by Darius Milhaud, Op

    Plays with incidental music

    Plays_with_incidental_music

AI & ChatGPT searchs for online references containing PLUTUS OPERA

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PLUTUS OPERA

  • Lotus
  • Girl/Female

    African, Australian, Christian, Danish, Greek

    Lotus

    Dreamlike; Lotus Flower

    Lotus

  • Paulus
  • Boy/Male

    Australian, Biblical, Danish, Dutch, Finnish, French, German, Greek, Latin, Swedish

    Paulus

    Small; Little; Form of Paul

    Paulus

  • Brutus
  • Boy/Male

    Latin Shakespearean

    Brutus

    Stupid.

    Brutus

  • Plutus
  • Boy/Male

    Latin Greek

    Plutus

    Wealthy.

    Plutus

  • Pontus
  • Biblical

    Pontus

    the sea

    Pontus

  • Cletus
  • Boy/Male

    American, Australian, Christian, French, Greek, Jamaican, Swedish

    Cletus

    Calling Forth; Summoned; Invoked; Glory

    Cletus

  • CLETUS
  • Male

    English

    CLETUS

    Latin form of Greek Kleitos, CLETUS means famous, renowned." 

    CLETUS

  • Cletus
  • Boy/Male

    Greek American

    Cletus

    Calling forth; summoned.

    Cletus

  • Clitus
  • Boy/Male

    Shakespearean

    Clitus

    The Tragedy of Julius Caesar' A servant to Brutus.

    Clitus

  • Paulus
  • Boy/Male

    Latin Biblical

    Paulus

    Small.

    Paulus

  • BRUTUS
  • Male

    English

    BRUTUS

    Roman Latin name BRUTUS means "heavy" or "the dullard." In use by the English.

    BRUTUS

  • Paulus
  • Biblical

    Paulus

    same as Paul

    Paulus

  • Pontus
  • Girl/Female

    Biblical

    Pontus

    The sea.

    Pontus

  • Platts
  • Surname or Lastname

    English (mainly South Yorkshire)

    Platts

    English (mainly South Yorkshire) : variant of Platt 1.Americanized form of German Platz.

    Platts

  • PONTUS
  • Male

    Scandinavian

    PONTUS

     Scandinavian form of Greek Pontios, PONTUS means "of the sea; seaman." Compare with another form of Pontus.

    PONTUS

  • Lutts
  • Surname or Lastname

    Americanized spelling of German Lutz.English

    Lutts

    Americanized spelling of German Lutz.English : patronymic from Lutt, a medieval personal name which probably preserves an Old English byname Lutt(a), derived from l̄t ‘small’ (see Light 3).

    Lutts

  • Pontus
  • Boy/Male

    Greek Biblical

    Pontus

    Sea.

    Pontus

  • Pettus
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Pettus

    English : variant of Pettis.

    Pettus

  • Velutus
  • Boy/Male

    Shakespearean

    Velutus

    The Tragedy of Coriolanus.' Sicinius Velutus, Tribune of the People.

    Velutus

  • LOTUS
  • Female

    English

    LOTUS

    English name derived from the flower name, from Latin lotus, from Greek lotos, a name for various kinds of plants before it came to designate the Egyptian "white lotus." The Greek word may ultimately come from Hebrew lowt, LOTUS means "covering, veil."

    LOTUS

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Online names & meanings

  • Girija
  • Boy/Male

    Hindu, Indian, Kashmiri

    Girija

    Mountain

  • Rajagopal
  • Boy/Male

    Hindu, Indian

    Rajagopal

    Lord Vishnu

  • Himansu | ஹிமாந்ஸு
  • Boy/Male

    Tamil

    Himansu | ஹிமாந்ஸு

    The Moon

  • Jaisheel
  • Boy/Male

    Hindu

    Jaisheel

    Victorious

  • Han
  • Boy/Male

    Chinese, Czech, Czechoslovakian, Dutch, German, Japanese, Netherlands, Polish

    Han

    Brave; Fierce; God is Gracious; A Rooster; Variant of John

  • Krystka
  • Girl/Female

    Polish

    Krystka

    Christian.

  • Metha
  • Girl/Female

    Danish, Dutch, Indian, Telugu

    Metha

    Sweet

  • Sadesh | ஸஂதேஷ
  • Boy/Male

    Tamil

    Sadesh | ஸஂதேஷ

  • Mayfield
  • Boy/Male

    Anglo, British, English

    Mayfield

    From the Warrior's Field

  • Mishmeet
  • Girl/Female

    Indian, Modern, Sikh

    Mishmeet

    Love

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Other words and meanings similar to

PLUTUS OPERA

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PLUTUS OPERA

  • Plexus
  • n.

    A network of vessels, nerves, or fibers.

  • Plexus
  • n.

    The system of equations required for the complete expression of the relations which exist between a set of quantities.

  • Pullus
  • n.

    A chick; a young bird in the downy stage.

  • Plexus
  • pl.

    of Plexus

  • Plutus
  • n.

    The son of Jason and Ceres, and the god of wealth. He was represented as bearing a cornucopia, and as blind, because his gifts were bestowed without discrimination of merit.

  • Pectus
  • n.

    The breast of a bird.

  • Lotus
  • n.

    A genus (Lotus) of leguminous plants much resembling clover.

  • Pluteus
  • n.

    The free-swimming larva of sea urchins and ophiurans, having several long stiff processes inclosing calcareous rods.

  • Pluteal
  • a.

    Of or pertaining to a pluteus.

  • Flatus
  • pl.

    of Flatus

  • Prunus
  • n.

    A genus of trees with perigynous rosaceous flowers, and a single two-ovuled carpel which usually becomes a drupe in ripening.

  • Plutei
  • pl.

    of Pluteus

  • Plumous
  • a.

    Having hairs, or other parts, arranged along an axis like a feather; feathery; plumelike; as, a plumose leaf; plumose tentacles.

  • Pluteuses
  • pl.

    of Pluteus

  • Lotus
  • n.

    A name of several kinds of water lilies; as Nelumbium speciosum, used in religious ceremonies, anciently in Egypt, and to this day in Asia; Nelumbium luteum, the American lotus; and Nymphaea Lotus and N. caerulea, the respectively white-flowered and blue-flowered lotus of modern Egypt, which, with Nelumbium speciosum, are figured on its ancient monuments.

  • Putter
  • n.

    One who puts or plates.

  • Lotus
  • n.

    The lotus of the lotuseaters, probably a tree found in Northern Africa, Sicily, Portugal, and Spain (Zizyphus Lotus), the fruit of which is mildly sweet. It was fabled by the ancients to make strangers who ate of it forget their native country, or lose all desire to return to it.

  • Plumous
  • a.

    Having feathers or plumes.

  • Plat
  • v. t.

    To lay out in plats or plots, as ground.