How To Use Late latin In A Sentence
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Etymology: Late Latin, from Greek encheiridion, from en in + cheir hand -- more at IN, CHIR-: HANDBOOK, MANUAL definition from Merriam-Webster online
Excellent Word of the Day: enchiridion
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In Late Latin there was a tendency to this spirant pronunciation which appears as early as the beginning of the 2nd century
Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 3, Part 1, Slice 1 "Austria, Lower" to "Bacon"
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Etymology: French, from Middle French soumelier official charged with transportation of supplies, from Old French, pack animal driver, probably alteration of * sommerier, from somier pack animal, from Medieval Latin saugmarius, from Late Latin sagma packsaddle — more at sumpter
Sommelier on the Half Shell
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Readers of the Observations would have been familiar with the words “decompound” and “decomposite” ” both from the late Latin decompositus, a rendering of the Greek parasynthetos ” in which the “de -” prefix signifies “repeatedly” or “further.”
David Hartley
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In turn, Italian had taken it from the Late Latin bancus, meaning “workbench,” a counterlike surface that could be set up by those who manned them—“bankers”—in town squares dotting the Italian Peninsula.
The English Is Coming!
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Readers of the Observations would have been familiar with the words “decompound” and “decomposite” ” both from the late Latin decompositus, a rendering of the Greek parasynthetos ” in which the “de -” prefix signifies “repeatedly” or “further.”
David Hartley
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All languages that derive from Latin form the word compas'sion by combining the prefix meaning with (corn -) and the root meaning suffering (Late Latin, passio).
The Unbearable Lightness of Being
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In turn, Italian had taken it from the Late Latin bancus, meaning “workbench,” a counterlike surface that could be set up by those who manned them—“bankers”—in town squares dotting the Italian Peninsula.
The English Is Coming!
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All languages that derive from Latin form. the word " compassion" by combining the prefix meaning "with"(com-) and the root meaning "suffering" (Late Latin, passio).
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Around the year 1000, with Romance languages replacing Latin as the spoken tongues of territories formerly within the Roman Empire, the Late Latin word bancus, on loan from a Germanic language, yielded the Italian word banca.
The English Is Coming!
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Etymology: Late Latin, from Greek encheiridion, from en in + cheir hand -- more at IN, CHIR-: HANDBOOK, MANUAL definition from Merriam-Webster online
Excellent Word of the Day: enchiridion
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Etymology: French, from Middle French soumelier official charged with transportation of supplies, from Old French, pack animal driver, probably alteration of * sommerier, from somier pack animal, from Medieval Latin saugmarius, from Late Latin sagma packsaddle — more at sumpter
Sommelier on the Half Shell
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Regional Note: Shivaree is the most common American regional form of charivari, a French word meaning "a noisy mock serenade for newlyweds" and probably deriving in turn from a Late Latin word meaning "headache.
The WELL: Sugaree
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Etymology: Late Latin systematicus, from Greek syst?
The Volokh Conspiracy » Are Human Rights Watch Officials Just Thin-Skinned? (No!):
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About two centuries later, the Late Latin term “flocculus” found its way into English and was also used with the meaning “a small loosely aggregated mass.”
Flocculate | clusterflock
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Similarly, I have split ligatured characters such as the ligatured "ae" and "oe" frequent in late Latin in particular.
Practical Taxidermy A manual of instruction to the amateur in collecting, preserving, and setting up natural history specimens of all kinds. To which is added a chapter upon the pictorial arrangement of museums. With additional instructions in modelling a
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So now, all you lucky people whose names I ordered worked into a rather longish piece of boilerplate latin vocative verse can now share in the tranquil blessings of soft breezes in forested glades, mostly free of singing shrapnel and the deep digestive grunt of artillery.
Archive 2007-06-01
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All languages that derive from Latin form. the word " compassion" by combining the prefix meaning "with"(com-) and the root meaning "suffering" (Late Latin, passio).