English to Indonesian Dictionary gladiator

gladiator

budak
definition
noun
The most famous is probably the Colosseum where thousands of Roman citizens would gather for their entertainment - be it animals fighting or gladiators etc.
(in ancient Rome) a man trained to fight with weapons against other men or wild animals in an arena.
translation of 'gladiator'
noun
budak
example
Spartacus is the tale of a slave who was trained as a 'gladiator' and led a bloody revolt against his Roman masters more than 2,000 years ago.
We suppose there were alternatives, like going to the 'gladiator' fights together, or conversing.
It was very flattering, except for one thing: if I am to fight like a 'gladiator' , they can't run a picture of me with my glasses.
The Romans had the biggest and the grandest 'gladiator' fights in the colosseums where one always beat the best.
In ancient Rome, 'gladiators' waged bloody battles to prove who was the better man.
The 'gladiators' enter the arena, snarling and cursing each other.
We buy and sell football players, as if they were servile 'gladiators' in Ancient Rome.
This is especially applied to those players engaged in team sports where you have to engage others, comparable to throwing 'gladiators' into the arena.
The most famous is probably the Colosseum where thousands of Roman citizens would gather for their entertainment - be it animals fighting or 'gladiators' etc.
For, like ancient Rome and its 'gladiators' , today's cities play host to colourful spectacles, marches, processions et al.
Telling Verus' story takes viewers into his world, showing how 'gladiators' really fought and trained and how the greatest amphitheatre of all was built.
Leaving the theater, we see around the Colosseum street artists disguised as 'gladiators' and centurions to entertain tourists…
It promises to throw new light on the way 'gladiators' fought and trained.
Although their final outcomes may have been brutal, ancient Roman 'gladiators' fought like gentlemen, according to new research.
Now the games that involved, and we can basically say that they were blood sports, they might involve pitting of slaves or prisoners of war, against wild animals or 'gladiators' .
The Colosseum was the greatest building in Ancient Rome but much smaller amphitheatres were built in Roman Britain and 'gladiatorial' fights may have occurred in these.
As Roman 'gladiators' entered the arena, they faced the emperor's box and exclaimed: ‘Hail, Caesar!’
Another chance to see the spectacular 'gladiatorial' combat re-enactment by the gladiators of Britannia.
As vital as the bread and the oil for keeping the people happy, were the numerous and frequent circuses scattered all over the city, where 'gladiators' fought wild beasts and each other.
He took part in 'gladiatorial' contests and also fought wild beasts in the amphitheater.
Nero's participation in chariot racing, 'gladiatorial' combats, and drama is the subject of the third chapter.
He shows that 'gladiators' who fought in the arena were treated much differently from those condemned to die in any number of spectacular ways (damnati or noxii).
Although gladiators were clearly Roman, the values presented in 'gladiatorial' single combat were central to Greek culture as well as to Roman.
Yesterday, however, the players once again fought like 'gladiators' and deserved at least a point.
Surrounded by a horseshoe of dazzling white marble terraces it has the appearance of a 'gladiatorial' arena rather than an athletics stadium.
The glare of the floodlights focussed on the 'gladiators' engaged in the middle, the arena one grand spectacle, the game fierce and engaging.
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