Ագաթանգեղոս/Agatangeghos 3- 12:6 |
monstrous nature. He taught those |
barbarous |
regions to change their gross |
Խորենացի/Khorenatsi 1- 3:9 |
about those unlettered, lazy, and |
barbarous |
men |
Խորենացի/Khorenatsi 2- 6:5 |
He summoned there the |
barbarous |
foreign race that inhabited the |
Խորենացի/Khorenatsi 2- 63:13 |
ancestral laws, they first received |
barbarous |
names: Biurat, and Smbat, and |
Խորենացի/Khorenatsi 2- 66:5 |
any disciples from among the |
barbarous |
pagans. And as he was |
Խորենացի/Khorenatsi 2- 87:6 |
to making war against those |
barbarous |
nations, though deceitfully he planned |
Խորենացի/Khorenatsi 3- 54:7 |
letters for that guttural, harsh, |
barbarous, |
and very rough tongue of |
Խորենացի/Khorenatsi 3- 57:35 |
good renown among such a |
barbarous |
nation. Yet we do not |
Դրասխանակերտցի/Draskhanakerttsi 1- 21:2 |
have a saying in their |
barbarous |
language: “Let us not be |
Դրասխանակերտցի/Draskhanakerttsi 1- 29:11 |
also brought into submission the |
barbarous |
peoples of Gugark’ and the |
Դրասխանակերտցի/Draskhanakerttsi 1- 63:1 |
took note and curbing their |
barbarous |
mores by means of well |
Թովմա/Tovma 1- 1:37 |
Thirdly, his |
barbarous |
deceit, that he in despair |
Թովմա/Tovma 1- 2:5 |
eras of different sorts and |
barbarous—( |
called) shar and ner and |
Լաստիվերցի/Lastivertsi 1- 11:14 |
that the Persians and other |
barbarous |
pagan peoples arose, sullied many |