materfamilias การใช้
- If the marriage made her a materfamilias, she took joint responsibility with her husband for aspects of household cult.
- In addition to being an attractive story, " Materfamilias " has the recommendation of being instructive, with an underlying . well-developed moral ."
- Once married, the wife became a part of her husband's family and gained the title of " materfamilias ", or " mother of a household ".
- Michael Coveney of WhatsOnStage offered that " there are pleasures to be had, notably from a leather-lunged Wendi Peters ( aka Cilla Battersby Brown in Coronation Street ) as the straight-talking materfamilias " [ 15 ].
- The " tutulus " was originally an Etruscan style worn commonly in the late 6th and early 5th century BCE . was a hairstyle worn primarily by the " materfamilias ", the mother of the family.
- The conduct of slaves reflected generally on the respectability of the household, and the " materfamilias " in particular was judged by her female slaves'sexual behavior, which was expected to be moral or at least discreet.
- HBO's hit series about a New Jersey crime family, will begin its second season Sunday, and from billboards and bus stops all across the city Livia Soprano, the passive-aggressive materfamilias, stares out at us like the spokesperson for some hostile search engine.
- But if the bride's or groom's parents should move into the spouse's family home, they wouldn't become like either parents or children of the " paterfamilias " or " materfamilias " . talk ) 08 : 58, 13 September 2009 ( UTC)
- "The Sydney Mail " opined that the author " has written us hitherto many acceptable domestic stories, but we question whether she has ever done anything before to equal her new story, " Materfamilias " . . . It is an admirable study of femininity in some of its greatest and its smallest at tributes by a woman.
- A section of the " Digest " by Ulpian categorizes Roman clothing on the basis of who may appropriately wear it : " vestimenta virilia ", " men's clothing, " is defined as the attire of the " paterfamilias ", " head of household "; " puerilia " is clothing that serves no purpose other than to mark its wearer as a " child " or minor; " muliebria " are the garments that characterize a " materfamilias "; " communia ", those that are " common, " that is, worn by either sex; and " familiarica ", clothing for the " familia ", the subordinates in a household, including the staff and slaves.