Top 10 similar words or synonyms for granius

maecius    0.866690

vettius    0.856432

egnatius    0.855619

rufius    0.854853

pacuvius    0.854229

latinius    0.853707

coelius    0.853533

fabianus    0.853343

nigidius    0.851641

martialis    0.850127

Top 30 analogous words or synonyms for granius

Article Example
Granius Flaccus Granius was used as a source on ancient Roman religion by the Church Fathers; Arnobius, for instance, refers to him as many as five times in his books "Contra Paganos", second in number only to Varro, equal to the famed Pythagorean scholar Nigidius Figulus, and more often than Cicero. Arnobius implies that he knows the works of Aristotle only indirectly, and cites Granius as his intermediary source at least once. Granius, he says, demonstrates that Minerva is Luna, and also identified the Novensiles with the Muses.
Granius Licinianus Granius Licinianus (active in the 2nd century AD) was a Roman author of historical and encyclopedic works that survive only in fragments. He most likely lived at the time of Hadrian.
Granius Flaccus Granius maintained that the Genius and the Lar were one and the same. He shared the view of Varro that the "res divinae" for both Apollo and Father Liber were celebrated on Mount Parnassus. It is sometimes unclear whether references to "Flaccus" refer to him or to Verrius Flaccus.
Granius Flaccus The point of law cited in the "Digest" involves distinguishing a girlfriend ("amica") from a concubine as defined by law ("concubina"). Granius explained that "pellex" (found elsewhere as "paelex"), Greek "pallakis", had become the usual term for a woman sleeping regularly with a man who has a legal wife ("uxor"), but that formerly it referred to a live-in partner in lieu of a wife.
Granius Flaccus Granius wrote a book "De indigitamentis" ("On Forms of Address"), on the "indigitamenta", that is, those pontifical books that contained prayer formularies or lists of deity names as a reference for accurate invocations. Granius dedicated this work to Caesar, as his contemporary Varro did his "Antiquitates Divinae". The title of the book is taken from a citation in the 3rd-century grammarian Censorinus. Macrobius cites him jointly with Varro as an authority on a religious point.