The front will have a wreath around the bottom, then above it'll say SPQR. On the back it'll say you're Roman god/goddess. The shirt's purple.
Question: Where would you find a Klingon? Answer: They do not exsit.
Read it
where can you find the store games stop
If you would watch Rocky you would find out.
Eugenio Occorsio has written: 'SPQR' -- subject(s): Business enterprises, Businesspeople
SPQR
Paul Hyde Bonner has written: 'Hotel Talleyrand' 'Ambassador extraordinary' 'SPQR, a romance.' -- subject(s): Protected DAISY, Lending library 'The art of Llewellyn Jones'
What your question means is not quite clear. SPQR was the motto of the Roman Republic. The acronym stood for Senatus Populasque Romanus (The Senate and the Roman people).
It was red with the letters SPQR in gold.
in written music
You would find it on a gravestone
John Maddox Roberts has written: 'SPQR' 'Murder in Tarsis (Dragonlance Classics, Vol. 1)' 'Conan The Champion' 'The Legacy of Prometheus' 'The Temple of the Muses (SPQR IV)' -- subject(s): Private investigators, Fiction, Decius Caecilius Metellus (Fictitious character), History 'SPQR III' -- subject(s): Fiction, Private investigators, History, Decius Caecilius Metellus (Fictitious character) 'Conan le valeureux' 'SPQR VIII' -- subject(s): Fiction, Private investigators, Decius Caecilius Metellus (Fictitious character), Tenement houses, History 'King of the Wood' 'A Point of Law (SPQR X)' 'SPQR X' -- subject(s): Fiction, Private investigators, History, Decius Caecilius Metellus (Fictitious character) 'Desperate highways' -- subject(s): Fiction, Private investigators, Missing persons, Gabe Treloar (Fictitious character) 'Conan the Marauder' 'The year of confusion' -- subject(s): Fiction, Private investigators, Murder, Decius Caecilius Metellus (Fictitious character), Investigation, Calendar reform 'Conan The Bold' -- subject(s): Conan (Fictitious character), Fiction 'Spacer' 'The king's gambit' -- subject(s): Fiction, Private investigators, Murder, Private investigators in fiction, Rome in fiction, Decius Caecilius Metellus (Fictitious character), Murder in fiction, Investigation, History 'Conan The Rogue' 'The ghosts of Saigon' -- subject(s): Fiction, Vietnamese Conflict, 1961-1975, Private investigators, Gabe Treloar (Fictitious character), Veterans 'Conan The Champion' 'Conan and the manhunters' 'SPQR IX' 'The Catiline Conspiracy (SPQR II)' 'Sturmland- Saga 01. Der Insulaner' 'The River God's Vengeance (SPQR VIII)' 'The Temple of the Muses' -- subject(s): Fiction, Legislators, Decius Caecilius Metellus (Fictitious character), History 'SPQR II' 'Murder in Tarsis' -- subject(s): Krynn (Imaginary place), Fiction 'The Temple of the Muses' -- subject(s): Fiction, Legislators, Decius Caecilius Metellus (Fictitious character), History 'Conan the Marauder' 'Conan, the champion' 'The Temple of the Muses (SPQR Mystery, Book 4)' 'Cloak of Illusion' 'SPQR VI' -- subject(s): Fiction, History, Private investigators, Decius Caecilius Metellus (Fictitious character) 'The Black Shields (Stormlands, Book 2)' 'The Steel Kings' 'Conan the Valorous' 'The cingulum' -- subject(s): Science fiction 'Space Angel' 'The Poisoned Land (Stormlands, No 3)' 'Space Angel' 'Der Frevel des Clodius. SPQR. Ein Krimi aus dem alten Rom' 'The Sacrilege' 'The strayed sheep of Charun' -- subject(s): Fiction in English 'A typical American town' -- subject(s): Fiction, Private investigators, City and town life 'The Islander (Stormlands, Book 1)' 'Conan and the treasure of python' -- subject(s): Conan (Fictitious character), Fiction
The symbol was an eagle, and the motto was SPQR, which, when translated, read, the senate and the population of Rome.
SPQR was the motto of ancient Rome. It was the abbreviated form of senatus poplusque romanus, which translated means the senate and the roman people. The Romans (just to make things difficult for present day Latin students) used the first and sometimes second letter of a word to abbreviate.
SPQR was an acronym which stood for Senatum Populesque Romanus (the Senate and the Roman People). It was the symbol of the Roman Republic. It was inscribed on coins, and placed at the end of documents made public by inscriptions in bronze or stone, in dedications of monuments and public works. It was also on the standards of the Roman legions.
SPQR, SenātusPopulusque Rōmānus(The Roman Senate and People)