Webster dictionary was developed by Noah Webster in the beginning of 19th century. On this website, you can find definition for Dacian from the 1913 edition of Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary. Define Dacian using one of the most comprehensive free online dictionaries on the web.
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Part of Speech: Noun
Results: 2
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Examples of usage:
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Suddenly he called out, " They certainly are Dacian letters!" - "The Golden Age in Transylvania", Mór Jókai.
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When, for example, we find in the Roman station at Birdoswald, on the Wall of Hadrian, an inscription recording the occupation of the spot by a Dacian cohort, and read in the 'Notitia' that such a cohort was posted at Amboglanna per lineam Valli, we are sure that Amboglanna and Birdoswald are identical. - "Early Britain--Roman Britain", Edward Conybeare.
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We possess fragments of Dacian speech in the botanical names collected by Dioskorides, and these, as interpreted by Grimm, are clearly Aryan, though not Greek. - "Lectures on The Science of Language", Max Müller.