- divertissement (Merriam Webster)
- adulate (Wordsmith)
- volant (Dictionary.com)
On the Latin side:
liberare: to set free, to liberate: verb. Example sentence:Veritas vos liberabit.Translation:The truth will set … http://t.co/kqR9UgBt
— Latin Language (@latinlanguage) June 18, 2012
con-stīpo, āvi, ātum, 1, v. a.,
to press or crowd closely together
— Charlton T. Lewis (@LewisandShort) June 17, 2012
… and Greek:
φορά
Ion. φορή, ἡ: (φέρω):—A. as an act,
I. (from Act.) carrying
B. that which is borne
1.load, freight, burden
2.rent, tribute,— Henry George Liddell (@LiddellAndScott) June 17, 2012
ἀμφισβήτητος
ἀμφις-βήτητος, ον, disputed, debatable, γῆ Th. 6.6.
— Henry George Liddell (@LiddellAndScott) June 17, 2012
… and for grammar mavens in general:
The “Illative” coordinating conjunctions: ergō, igitur, itaque , ideō, idcircō, inde, proinde, therefore, accordingly. GS 224 #grammar
— Greek+Latin Grammar (@AncientGrammar) June 17, 2012
The subjunctive, in its simplest and most primitive use, in Homer, expresses futurity, like the fut. ind. & has οὐ for its negative GW I.II
— Greek+Latin Grammar (@AncientGrammar) June 17, 2012