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latinate

[ US /ˈɫætəˌneɪt/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. derived from or imitative of Latin

How To Use latinate In A Sentence

  • Lacy, constable of Chester, raised the chief vassal of the palatinate to comital rank. The History of England From the Accession of Henry III. to the Death of Edward III. (1216-1377)
  • The ravaging of the Palatinate at the start of the League of Augsburg war was intended to deny the area to enemy armies, limiting the number of fronts Louis's armies had to cover.
  • When the King had taken the Palatinate, I required him to arrest the culprits; the King gave orders for it, and they were in fact seized, but afterwards liberated by a counter-order of Louvois. The Entire Memoirs of Louis XIV and the Regency
  • The platinated oligonucleotides were repurified by ion-exchange fast protein liquid chromatography.
  • Detachment threw stones at two French officers who were driving through the village of Weyersbusch in the Rhine Palatinate. Integration of the Armed Forces, 1940-1965
  • The second was the transportation of “the Palatines,” expatriated by stress of persecution and war, not from the Rhenish Palatinate only, but from the archduchy of Salzburg and from other parts of Germany and Switzerland, gathered up and removed to America, some of them directly, some by way of A History of American Christianity
  • However, although his actual name isn't Miltonic or especially literary, it is indeed trisyllabic with a disyllabic nickname, and Latinate, and has at least a sort of Early Modern connection. Ferule & Fescue
  • It's a nice, gristly, Germanic word, contrasting with the limitless space evoked by the latinate "America". Poem of the week: Pier by Vona Groarke
  • I mean that it is recognizable in the same way 'sociolinguistics' is recognizable as a Latinate word or y = mx + b is recognizable as the slope-intercept form for linear equations: certainly there are people who would not recognize it as such, but a passing familiarity with the subject matter should render it clear. Feminist blogs
  • The Salian estates, to which his father had fallen heir on the death of Henry V, formed a nucleus, while, by purchase and otherwise, he acquired castle after castle, and one stretch of territory after another, especially in Suabia and the Rhine Palatinate. The Great Events by Famous Historians, Volume 06 (From Barbarossa to Dante)
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