英:['stemə]
美:['stemə]
英:['stemə]
美:['stemə]
stem·ma
ste m
复数:stemmata或stemmas
stemmatic (adj.)
Noun
1. a tree diagram showing a reconstruction of the transmission of manuscripts of a literary work
2. the descendants of one individual;
"his entire lineage has been warriors"
3. an eye having a single lens
侧单眼
側單眼
Latin, wreath, pedigree (from the wreaths placed on ancestral images), from Greek, wreath, from stephein to crown, enwreathe
The first known use of stemma was in 1826
1 The foundation of new forms of pedigree of clans in 15th century extended the understanding of inner and outer stemma.
新发现了15世纪族谱的形式,进而加深了对于“内外谱”的认识。
2 According to their stemma records, 15 of the CAO clans claimed to be descendants of Emperor CAO.
3 Her discipline of philology, the study of the development of texts over time, requires comparing manuscripts to each other, building a stemma, or genealogy of texts, from a parent or original manuscript.
4 I looked around as he spoke and you could almost breathe the beauty: a piece of an Islamic column from Spain, an Italian Renaissance stemma, many Berber pots, pine cones and marble busts.
5 Because when they painted a stemma on the glaze they had still feudal faith in nobility, and when they painted a Madonna or Ecce Homo they had still childlike belief in divinity.
6 Its great faceted eyes inform it of all that happens to right and left; its three stemmata, like little ruby telescopes, explore the sky above its head.
7 OCELLI.—The simple eyes or stemmata of insects, usually situated on the crown of the head between the great compound eyes.