
Yet, when I checked my dictionary / encyclopedia program, containing 50+ dictionaries and encyclopedias, not one of them had an entry other than Greek goddesses and Latin "hour" / "times" for this word. The word moira means share or portion of something, whether meal, land, or victory spoils (compare this with the English word merit from the Latin meritum, a reward).By extension, Moirai means The Apportioners, i.e., the ones who give to each his own. It is almost like I am already supposed to know what the word means. The Fates: A Quick Profile Their Name and their Names The Fates were originally called Moirai in Ancient Greece. But over the course of 30+ minutes, I found nearly a dozen different publications with the word "Horae" in the title, and not a single webpage translated it. You would think if someone was referencing "Horae Biblicae," or selling a book online, they might actually bother to translate the name into English-at least somewhere, on some website. He has several years of experience in the sales industry which makes him one of the best in selling, training, and managing his sales team. Mohammad is the Sales Manager at Horae Group.

I'm utterly stunned that out of nearly a dozen books online with the title "horae," not one webpage bothered to translate the title (including "horae") into English. Mohammad doesn’t only have an outstanding set of sales skills, he also has a great sense of dark humor too keeping things both fun and serious at the office. Whoever can answer what it exactly means in scholarly works like these below, you will deserve a hefty reward. How beautiful it is, that eye-on-the-object look. But that is clearly not the context in which "horae" is used in titles like those above. I You need not see what someone is doing to know if it is his vocation, you have only to watch his eyes: a cook mixing a sauce, a surgeon making a primary incision, a clerk completing a bill of lading, wear the same rapt expression, forgetting themselves in a function. And aside from that, most dictionary entries refer "horae" to false Greek goddesses of seasons (hence "times").

Yes, I quickly found the Latin meaning of the word.
