No. A senator may have a purple stripe on his toga and tunic, but that's all. Purple was reserved for the emperor and for triumphing generals.
No. A senator may have a purple stripe on his toga and tunic, but that's all. Purple was reserved for the emperor and for triumphing generals.
No. A senator may have a purple stripe on his toga and tunic, but that's all. Purple was reserved for the emperor and for triumphing generals.
No. A senator may have a purple stripe on his toga and tunic, but that's all. Purple was reserved for the emperor and for triumphing generals.
No. A senator may have a purple stripe on his toga and tunic, but that's all. Purple was reserved for the emperor and for triumphing generals.
No. A senator may have a purple stripe on his toga and tunic, but that's all. Purple was reserved for the emperor and for triumphing generals.
No. A senator may have a purple stripe on his toga and tunic, but that's all. Purple was reserved for the emperor and for triumphing generals.
No. A senator may have a purple stripe on his toga and tunic, but that's all. Purple was reserved for the emperor and for triumphing generals.
No. A senator may have a purple stripe on his toga and tunic, but that's all. Purple was reserved for the emperor and for triumphing generals.
No. A senator may have a purple stripe on his toga and tunic, but that's all. Purple was reserved for the emperor and for triumphing generals.
Nevada takes its name from a Spanish word meaning snow-clad.
The Battle of Mobile Bay.
The USS Monitor was the first Union submarine (it was, in reality, only semi-submersible). The USS Merrimac(k) was salvaged by the Confederate Navy and plated with iron (iron clad) and commissioned as the CSS Virginia. The Monitor and the Virginia went at it in the Battle of Hampton Roads. This went down in history as the first battle between two ironclads.
The two most famous iron-clad ships of the civil war era were the Union's USS Monitor, and the Confederacy's CSS Virginia. They were made famous when they fought at the battle of Hampton Roads, the first confrontation between two iron-clads. (Found on many other sites also, please remember the sites that this was found on may or my not be true)
No single person invented the practical ironclad. They evolved through many different inventions and additions over a period of about 100 years.
The Romans wore a variety of colors and none of them had much meaning except the color purple. A young boy would have a purple stripe on his toga, before he received his "official" toga of manhood. A senator would have a broad purple stripe on his toga and sometimes his tunic, symbolizing his office. A triumphing general would be clad all in purple and it was a great honor if the senate allowed him to wear his purple robes for a public ceremony after his big day was over. The only other colors that symbolized anything else were the black or dark blue of mourning.
Prince
Prince (get them oodles)
The past tense of clad is clad.
"ill-clad" has two syllables.
Copper clad is copper clad. So often, as an example, the dome of a mosque will be clad with copper. It means that a structure/object is not made with copper, but clad/covered with copper.
CLAD
All-Clad was created in 1960.
In the 1940s and 1950s, Hollywood's most glamorous actresses were often clad in velvet and pearls. The royal knights were clad in suits of armor. Clad in a crisp, white shirt and business suit, he left for the job interview. The toddler, clad in his fuzzy pajamas, ran to his mother's bedside.
The knight was clad in shining armor
The clay statue was then clad in lead.
Iron Clad Building was created in 1862.