Tuesday, February 2, 2010

Deep-girdled What Do 'fair-girdled' And 'deep-girdled' Mean In The Iliad?

What do 'fair-girdled' and 'deep-girdled' mean in the Iliad? - deep-girdled

The prose of the Iliad of Homer refers often set at beautiful women or women in the deep, narrow. These attributes seem to be positive, but I'm curious - What is exactly what they mean? Thanks for the explanation!

1 comment:

lordreit... said...

A belt was then hanging a belt with tassels. Exhibition closed tight to say, civil engineering, surrounded belt, could result in a higher belt. It had nothing to do with lingerie known size. But all these words refer to tight clothing - Fencing namely: - body. Girth is another word that means the same thing.
The painful disease shingles, itchy skin and has the same meaning. This disease, usually in the chest around the trunk of the body front and back. It comes from the word cingulum. The tiles of a house from another unit word that means. Nothing to do with gangs.

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