Similar words: punish, punished, punitive, impunity, punishment, tunic, runic, municipal. Meaning: n. the Phoenician dialect of ancient Carthage. adj. 1. of or relating to or characteristic of ancient Carthage or its people or their language 2. tending to betray; especially having a treacherous character as attributed to the Carthaginians by the Romans.
Random good picture Not show
1. Roman general in the Second Punic War.
2. He's a guy with Punic faith.
3. After the Second Punic War, there were obvious changes in Roman economy.
4. Experience their legacy in Phoenician settlements, Punic cities, Greek temples, Roman amphitheatres, Norman Arab castles and Aragonese churches.
5. Carthaginian army in the Second Punic War; crossed the Alps and defeated the Romans but was recalled to defend Carthage and was defeated.
6. It resisted Punic, Roman, and Christian invasions but was conquered by the Arabs and absorbed into Muslim civilization in the 7th.
7. Through the three Punic Wars, Rome defeated Carthage and became an unparalleled strong county in the Mediterranean.
8. The Apollinarian Games were instituted during the second Punic war.
9. Punic faith; the perfidious Judas; the fiercest and most treacherous of foes; treacherous intrigues.
10. But even as early as the Punic Wars the sense of citizenship was being undermined by the growth of wealth and slavery.
11. and did not lose them: Capua was punished (not completely destroyed) in 211 BC for its support of Hannibal in the Second Punic War (218–201 BC) after Rome recaptured the city.
12. In 202 he won a major victory over Hannibal at the Battle of Zama, ending the Second Punic War and winning the name Africanus.
13. In a few short months,(Sentencedict.com) and the rapid reconstruction of the naval first Punic defeat.
14. They were used during the Roman invasion in the first Punic War and at the battle of Zama to little effect.
15. On the shores of the Mediterranean, Tipasa was an ancient Punic trading-post conquered by Rome and turned into a strategic base for the conquest of the kingdoms of Mauritania.
16. Both entered epic foreign struggles to protect weak allies from threatening aggressors (for Rome, the Punic Wars with Carthage, 264 BC–146 BC; for America, the struggle to save Europe, 1918–1989).
17. Phoenician spread from its home in modern Lebanon along the northern coast of Africa, where (pronounced in Latin as Punic) it became the language of the Carthaginian empire.
18. The Rome's leagues was invited to intervent Sicily by the mercenaries in 264, BC, force Syracus to make alliance with Rome to defeat Carthages in the 1st Punic War.
19. Later the use spread throughout Europe and elephants were used in such famous campaigns as the Macedonian wars and by Hannibal during the Second Punic War.
20. The later stage of Rome here refers to the period from the later period of Rome republic (approximately from the second Punic War) to the destruction of the Empire Rome.
21. Paterson begins in the ancient world, considering popular explanations for the ascendance of Rome and, in particular, their victory over Carthage in the Punic Wars.
More similar words: punish, punished, punitive, impunity, punishment, tunic, runic, municipal, capital punishment, communicate, incommunicado, communication, communicative, municipality, excommunicate, communicate with, cruel and unusual punishment, telecommunication, telecommunications, pun, puny, punch, pundit, punjab, expunge, pungent, pungency, punctual, puncture, punctuate.