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Talis

Talis is a Latin adjective meaning "such, of such a sort", and may refer to:

  • Talis (moth), a genus of moths of the Crambidae family
  • Talis bag, a bag in which to carry one's talis (prayer shawl)
  • Talis Group, a software company in Birmingham, England
  • Talis J. Colberg, attorney general of Alaska, appointed 2006
  • Talis Kitsing, Estonian kickboxer and politician
  • Talis Kimberley, English folk singer-songwriter
  • Talis, Pakistan, a village in Ghanche District, Pakistan
  • Tallit, a Jewish prayer shawl
  • Talış (disambiguation), places in Azerbaijan
  • Metaclazepam, an anxiolytic drug (trade name)
Talis (moth)
"Tulis" redirects here. For a subdistrict in Batang Regency, Central Java, Indonesia, see Tulis (subdistrict)

Talis is a genus of moths of the Crambidae family.

Usage examples of "talis".

Her calm eyes, Talis Pelucir noted, were the exact shade of blue framed by the broad window behind her.

Pelucir for the sorcery, despite the fact, as Talis reminded her, that the sorcery had killed the King of Pelucir.

Talis said bleakly, thinking of his brother, Burne, younger than Talis at the time, watching their father die.

Talis like his misty shadow, for no reason that Talis could discern, except that the mountain seemed to belong to the mage.

Pelucir, Talis, trying to Extinguish a Candle Flame by Will, shattered every mirror around him.

Even passing through the dim light in the middle floor, Talis could not see what lay beyond it.

It was a furious, glowing thing, a little, Talis thought, like the light he had created.

Then he added something that caused Talis to hang even more perilously out the window, trying to hear.

The single eye at the top of the keep looked back at Talis, opaque with memory or light.

It was a mystery, like the spellbook, which, Talis reminded himself, he should go back and rescue.

Through the empty frame of his lenses Talis saw a moving blur of green, trees riding a hard wind.

He pounded Talis between the shoulder blades again, then took a closer look at him.

Talis, wandering badly, forced himself to listen to his great-uncle relate a complex incident that had happened last autumn, or the one ten years before, or some autumn before Talis was born.

Then they both crouched, picking up goblets, cutlery, broken plate, while the guards and the face in the door watched bemusedly, and Talis examined the remains of his meal.

Hands, barely visible, like windblown snow, gripped Talis, lifted him.