cicero

[sis-uh-roh] /ˈsɪs əˌroʊ/
noun, plural ciceros. Printing.
1.
a Continental unit of measurement for type, equal to 12 Didot points, or 0.178 inches (4.5 mm), roughly comparable to a pica.
Origin
named after the type cast for a 15th-century edition of Cicero's De Oratore

Cicero

[sis-uh-roh] /ˈsɪs əˌroʊ/
noun
1.
Marcus Tullius
[tuhl-ee-uh s] /ˈtʌl i əs/ (Show IPA),
("Tully") 106–43 b.c, Roman statesman, orator, and writer.
2.
a city in NE Illinois, near Chicago.
British Dictionary definitions for cicero

cicero

/ˈsɪsəˌrəʊ/
noun (pl) -ros
1.
a measure for type that is somewhat larger than the pica
Word Origin
C19: from its first being used in a 15th-century edition of the writings of Marcus Tullius Cicero (106–43 bc), the Roman consul, orator, and writer

Cicero

/ˈsɪsəˌrəʊ/
noun
1.
Marcus Tullius (ˈmɑːkəs ˈtʌlɪəs). 106–43 bc, Roman consul, orator, and writer. He foiled Catiline's conspiracy (63) and was killed by Mark Antony's agents after he denounced Antony in the Philippics. His writings are regarded as a model of Latin prose Formerly known in English as Tully
cicero in Culture

Cicero definition


An orator, writer, and statesman of ancient Rome. His many speeches to the Roman Senate are famous for their rhetorical techniques and their ornate style.

cicero in Technology
project
Control Information system Concepts based on Encapsulated Real-time Objects.
A CERN DRDC proposal.
(1995-01-25)
Encyclopedia Article for cicero

Cicero

one of the most famous spies of World War II, who worked for Nazi Germany in 1943-44 while he was employed as valet to Sir Hughe Montgomery Knatchbull-Hugessen, British ambassador to neutral Turkey from 1939. He photographed secret documents from the embassy safe and turned the films over to the former German chancellor Franz von Papen, at that time German ambassador in Ankara. For this service the Hitler government paid Cicero large sums in British money, most of it counterfeited in Germany. Despite the evident authenticity of the films, the Nazi officials in Berlin mistrusted Cicero and are said to have disregarded his information (some of which dealt with plans for the Allied invasion of Normandy on D-Day, June 6, 1944).

Learn more about Cicero with a free trial on Britannica.com