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    Synonyms and Definitions

    Use "latin" in a sentence

    latin example sentences

    latin


    1. She was loathe to admit that the thrill of leaping over blue water in the clutches of a Latin Lothario was part of the reason she wasn't angrier about this


    2. He’s got a white father and the net result is that he has very dark eyes but looks Latin more than anything, if you know what I mean


    3. It was quite a romance novel wasn't it, - shy, bookish Angel re-incarnated in a body seething with uncontrollable lust, and a dashing latin Lothario rebuild the technology industry in a new world-


    4. She cranked it up and suddenly the house was filled with Latin music


    5. Most major cites in Europe, Asia and Latin America had them at the time


    6. were anciently called universities, which, indeed, is the proper Latin name for any


    7. On an impulse, he decided to try Latin


    8. was able to converse with him in Latin


    9. in the season,’ he said, responding in kind to Jean’s Latin


    10. discover that Latin was seldom spoken, except during

    11. There are some countries in Latin America and Eastern Europe that are still pretty loose, but international pressure is slowly bringing them around


    12. The hooded man was chanting something in Latin


    13. Nathaniel’s limited knowledge of Latin was based more on street Italian than the classics but as far as he could work out this meant something like, Dark Lord take us now


    14. the Ave Maria (probably the only Latin he knew)


    15. The Romans left behind some features of Latin


    16. Italians have forgotten classical Latin and had


    17. is that the original Latin word was designating


    18. but he managed better in Frankfurt, with Latin


    19. They are called in Latin Coloni Partiarii


    20. It is even uncertain where some of them were situated, or to what towns in Europe the Latin names given to some of them belong

    21. The Latin word (colonia) signifies simply a plantation


    22. To a Latin from Southern France or Italy, a presenter who uses his hands and arms when speaking may seem dynamic and friendly


    23. CV stands for the Latin words "curriculum vitae", meaning "the course of one's life"


    24. Latin roots "ex" and "spect" and its literal meaning is "to


    25. In the schools, the youth are taught, or at least may be taught, Greek and Latin; that is, everything which the masters pretend to teach, or which it is expected they should teach


    26. When Christianity was first established by law, a corrupted Latin had become the common language of all the western parts of Europe


    27. The service of the church, accordingly, and the translation of the Bible which were read in churches, were both in that corrupted Latin; that is, in the common language of the country, After the irruption of the barbarous nations who overturned the Roman empire, Latin gradually ceased to be the language of any part of Europe


    28. Though Latin, therefore, was no longer understood anywhere by the great body of the people, the whole service of the church still continued to be performed in that language


    29. But it was necessary that the priests should understand something of that sacred and learned language in which they were to officiate; and the study of the Latin language therefore made, from the beginning, an essential part of university education


    30. The infallible decrees of the church had pronounced the Latin translation of the Bible, commonly called the Latin Vulgate, to have been equally dictated by divine inspiration, and therefore of equal authority with the Greek and Hebrew originals

    31. universities, therefore, that language was taught previous to the study of philosophy, and as soon as the student had made some progress in the Latin


    32. Originally, the first rudiments, both of the Greek and Latin languages, were taught in universities; and in some universities they still continue to be so


    33. If, in those little schools, the books by which the children are taught to read, were a little more instructive than they commonly are; and if, instead of a little smattering in Latin, which the children of the common people are sometimes taught there, and which can scarce ever be of any use to them, they were instructed in the elementary parts of geometry and mechanics ; the literary education of this rank of people would, perhaps, be as complete as can be


    34. Translations into Latin, Coptic and Syriac were performed during the 200’s AD and these were spread throughout the world as “Inspired Scripture”


    35. (Directly from the Latin, meaning „talking against)


    36. From the Latin „e," meaning out, and the Latin verb „duco," thus to lead out


    37. I must, however, differ from those who consider it a monolithic tongue, due to the fact that, in its present state, it has evolved from the ancient Briton, the Roman Latin, the Anglo and Saxon as well as the Frisian, the Norse, and of course French, after the Battle of Hastings in 1066, which resulted in the reign of the Plantagenets that lasted for two hundred years and resulted in the Court of England speaking French accordingly


    38. State of happiness, derived from the Latin „felix," meaning happy


    39. Taking our cue literally from the Latin, the word homophobe means fear of men


    40. Interesting word, derived from the Latin verb „incipare," a verb meaning „to begin

    41. From the Latin lachrima, tear


    42. Latin, the Study of, n


    43. Latin, as I can attest, will expand your vocabulary exponentially


    44. A few weeks later, my opinion of this attorney went further south, for he had written a memo to my supervisor, using the Latin „sina qua non


    45. Lovely Latin phrase, but horrible moral concept: First among equals


    46. Once again, straight from the Latin: „a public thing," and not, for God"s sake, to be confused with a Democracy, which is precisely what we do not have in these United States


    47. Thus, the Latin word for salt was salus


    48. Spain) and you will find that the rules relating to vosotros/vosotras do not apply in Latin American countries


    49. As an aside, just where do we think the Latin


    50. The term means, strictly from the Latin; „Goodbye Sayer











































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    Synonyms for "latin"

    latin romance

    "latin" definitions

    any dialect of the language of ancient Rome


    an inhabitant of ancient Latium


    a person who is a member of those peoples whose languages derived from Latin


    of or relating to the ancient Latins or the Latin language


    relating to people or countries speaking Romance languages


    relating to languages derived from Latin


    of or relating to the ancient region of Latium