Each year, March ushers in celebrations of St. Patrick's Day, the start of spring and Women's History Month. It also comes with an ominous warning: "Beware the Ides of March." The phrase comes ...
TODAY marks the Ides of March, a day that proved disastrous for one unlucky Roman. Online bingo players often have superstitious beliefs about what will bring them good fortunate with the bingo gods.
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What Is the Ides of March?
The “Ides of March”, or March 15th, is best known as the date of Julius Caesar’s assassination. On this day, in 44 BCE, the group of senators, including Marcus Junius Brutus and Gaius ...
In the play, one of the characters warned “Beware the Ides of March” and this has since then been immortalized. Part of the immortalization is the popular use of the phrase about the coming of March, ...
The local clan of riverside turkey buzzards — or vultures if you want to get persnickety about proper nomenclature — have ...
FARGO — "Beware the Ides of March!" quoth the soothsayer to Julius Caesar in Shakespeare's play. And rightfully so. Today's weather is certainly that of a dagger, as it often is on this date and ...
"Beware the Ides of March." It’s a phrase we hear every year as meteorological spring begins to take hold, but is there any real cause for concern? After all, some of America's greatest storms ...
THE phrase "ides of March" (the 15th day of March in ancient Roman calendar) has carried a sense of foreboding ever since William Shakespeare popularized it through his play, "Julius Caesar." In the ...
The next full moon will prove to be an exquisite and special one, with the rare appearance of a blood moon — during a total lunar eclipse — followed by The Ides of March and leading into the ...