1. sabine - Noun
2. sabine - Adjective
3. Sabine - Proper noun
Of or pertaining to the ancient Sabines, a people of Italy.
One of the Sabine people.
See Savin.
Source: Webster's dictionaryI slept in the bedroom used by Sabine Baring-Gould's wife when I was researching 'The Moor,' and later the Jamaica Inn on Bodmin Moor. Laurie R. King
Oh, we have had great lovers that we followed to the pyre; Our boasts out-do the Sabine girls-the Mosque of St. Sophia. And we are very sure of ours, for when a city falls, They seize us and they love us and they hurl us from the walls. Nathalia Crane
Sighing, she shut the book with a snap. "All right. You need to vent, so I'll listen to you vent. But do it quickly, because Rydstorm was about to plunder Sabine with his thick, hard-. Gena Showalter
According to Alessio Latins and Umbrians both did not name the wolf because of a religious taboo, thence their use of loanwords such as lupus in Latin (which is Sabine, instead of the expected *luquos) and the Umbrians hirpos (cfr. Source: Internet
Adam reads his brothers the story of "The Sobbin' Women" (taken from Plutarch 's story of the Sabine Women ), one of the books Milly brought to the homestead. Source: Internet
After the independence of the Republic of Texas from Mexico in 1836, the boundary between the U.S. and Texas was firmly established at the Sabine in accordance with the Adams-Onís Treaty. Source: Internet