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amice
1[ am-is ]
noun
- an oblong vestment, usually of white linen, worn about the neck and shoulders and partly under the alb.
amice
2[ am-is ]
noun
AMICE
1abbreviation for
- Associate Member of the Institution of Civil Engineers
amice
2/ ˈæɪ /
noun
- Christianity a rectangular piece of white linen worn by priests around the neck and shoulders under the alb or, formerly, on the head
amice
3/ ˈæɪ /
noun
- another word for almuce
Word History and Origins
Origin of amice1
Origin of amice2
Word History and Origins
Origin of amice1
Example Sentences
For bishops and archbishops, the liturgical clothes for a funeral include the alb, a white tunic held by a traditional cord called cincture, the amice, a short linen cloth to cover the neck, and a red chasuble, a solemn cape, in honour of the pope.
By double-checking that the hyperplane function contains squared values, a human can easily verify that the function is positive, which means the trajectory is collision-free, Amice explains.
While their approach is fast enough to be used as a final safety check in some real-world situations, it is still too slow to be implemented directly in a robot motion planning loop, where decisions need to be made in microseconds, Amice says.
“Salve, amice,” he said, and a subtle animation flickered in his rigid features, usually so locked up, and distant: “Valesne? Quid est rei?”
Amice, previous to the Reformation, was a household favourite, and Colet a perfect pet.
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