Conversely Olympias was a
Molossian, where redheads were reputedly common," Chugg said.
Nor was he satisfied with that, but he slaughtered A hostage,
Molossian, slitting his throat with his sword ...
like a
Molossian or tawny Spartan hound, the steadfast friend of shepherds, I shall drive off and pursue any wild animal through the deep snow with raised ears ...
Jennings, who acquired it in Rome in the late 1750s, is regularly identified as a
Molossian hound, the ancestor of the modern mastiff.
It has a navy (an inflatable raft), a national observatory (a telescope), and a currency; the latter, called the Valora, is "pegged to the value of Pillsbury Cookie Dough." With a total population of four, it's unable to field its own baseball team, so instead it focuses on broomball, a local sport that "can appear very similar to field hockey." The republic also has its own time zone: according to the country's official website,
Molossian Standard Time "is 39 minutes ahead of Pacific Standard Time, or if you prefer, 21 minutes behind Mountain Standard Time."
"She was a
Molossian princess, and I liked that her accent was a bit exotic.
When therefore they had exposed the object which they thought they had thrown their missiles at, they found that he had disappeared and instead of him there was a hound who resembled in form and look a
Molossian dog, but was in size the equal of the largest lion; there he lay before their eyes, pounded to a pulp by their stones and vomiting foam as mad dogs do.
Whereas Pyrrhus, king of Epirus, is famous as an enemy of Rome (282-72 B.C.), few remember that Alexander the
Molossian, king of Epirus, was overcome by the Lucanians and Samnites.(58) The event is even more minor than the victory of Marcellus over the Insubres.