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Simplicius

American  
[sim-plish-ee-uhs] / sɪmˈplɪʃ i əs /

noun

  1. Saint, died a.d. 483, pope 468–483.


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

Asked whether a shelved report on the atrocities chaired by a judge, Simplicius Chihambakwe, would ever be published, as requested by the opposition, he says, “I don’t know what happened to that report.”

From Economist

“Simplicius” predates that “exile” but it is still a work of protest — against war, brutality and abuse of power.

From New York Times

One interesting detail that he took from the original libretto but expanded was the way the innocent, rustic Simplicius equates the terror of the soldiers with a wolf that kills his sheep.

From New York Times

This year’s “Simplicius” followed suit.

From New York Times

It certainly wasn’t for Karl Amadeus Hartmann, whose opera “Simplicius Simplicissimus” was begun just after Hitler came to power, had no chance of performance in the Third Reich and, despite occasional postwar productions, languished at the margins of the repertoire.

From New York Times