Properly
61matador — Properly called matador de toros literally, a killer of bulls the matador is the principal, that is, the most admired and best paid, performer in the modern bullfight, which uses four to five yearold bulls. See also: bullfighting IAN… …
62gambit — Properly, a gambit is an opening move that involves some strategic sacrifice or concession. All gambits are opening moves, but not all opening moves are gambits …
63Ovid — properly Publius Ovidius Naso. (43 bc–ad 17) Roman poet …
64Plutarch — Properly Ploutarchos (c. 46–c. 120). Greek historian, biographer, and philosopher …
65restive — properly means balky or obstinate, refusing to move or budge. A crowd of protesters may grow restive upon the arrival of mounted police, but a person sitting uncomfortably on a hard bench is better described as restless …
66Terence — Properly Publius Terentius Afer (c. 190–159 bc); Roman comedy writer …
67claim — Properly, to claim means to demand recognition of a right. You claim something that you wish to call your own an inheritance, a lost possession, a piece of land. But increasingly it is used in the sense of assert or contend, as here: They… …
68well-balanced — properly leveled, made even …
69Kendlich — properly, by nature …
70See — properly, the official seat of a bishop. Commonly used for the territorial unit of administration in the church, governed by a bishop; also known as a diocese ♦ The seat of a bishop, i.e. his bishopric. (Heath, Peter. Church and Realm, 1272 1461 …