This is clearly part of a much longer text and it is a shame you have selected only a small portion of it, since it makes little sense on its own. I suspect it may be taken from the story of Dido and Aeneas and it will read something like:
" . . . thus he says, and he hands over to me the sacred emblems of Troy . . ."
Lead Troy and hand over the sacred emblems to me
The Latin translation of the Bible - Vulgate - has this used in John 19:5 translated into English as 'behold (the) man.'Ioannes 19:5Biblia Sacra Vulgata (VULGATE)5 ut cognoscatis quia in eo nullam causam invenio et purpureum vestimentum et dicit eis ecce homo
Rosa flava.
You say 'sacer'.sacer in the masculine, sacra in the feminine, sacrum in the neuter
Harmonia Sacra was created in 1832.
Bibliotheca Sacra was created in 1844.
'navis sacra' means 'sacred ship'. 'navis' means 'boat' or 'ship', and 'sacra' means 'sacred'.
Joh. Godofr Petschelii has written: 'Ioh. Godofr. Petschelii ... Cantor Christianvs i.e. Cantica sacra' -- subject(s): Hymns, Latin, Latin Hymns
The boswellia sacra tree is the source for Frankincense.
The Latin word for "sacrifice" is sacrificium, from sacra "sacred rites" and facere "to do".The word holocaustum also exists, for sacrifice that is burnt in its entirety. It comes from the Greek words holos"whole" and kaustos "burnt".
Sacra di San Michele ended in 1622.
The Latin word sacra can be the feminine form of the adjective sacer, which means holy, sacred or divine. It can also be the plural form of the neuter noun sacrum, which means a sacred object, a consecrated place or a temple.
no it is different subspecies, one in Yemen (sacra) the other in Somalia (carteri)