- borborygmus (Merriam Webster)
- enchiridion (OED)
- instauration (Dictionary.com)
Latinitweets:
carmen: poem, song: noun. Example sentence:Quaedam carmina sunt bona; plura sunt mala.Translation:Some poems are… http://t.co/fbcSre35
— Latin Language (@latinlanguage) June 24, 2012
preposition: pro , + ablative => in front of, for, in return for http://t.co/pTGZGjM0 #Latin #Vocab #LatinVocab
— LatinVocab (@LatinVocab) June 24, 2012
nīmīrum
adv. lit. not wonderful; cf., less strong than mirum ni; hence, to introduce as indisputable, without doubt, doubtless, certainly
— Charlton T. Lewis (@LewisandShort) June 24, 2012
… and on the Greek side:
ἑκᾱτόμβη
ἑκᾱτόμ-βη, ἡ, (ἑκατόν, βοῦς) prop. an offering of a hundred oxen; but even in Hom., generally, sacrifice
— Henry George Liddell (@LiddellAndScott) June 24, 2012
… and for the grammar mavens:
Past Potential—Past tenses (usu. aorist or imperf.) of the indic. with ἄν (κέν) denote past potentiality, probability, or necessity GG 1784
— Greek+Latin Grammar (@AncientGrammar) June 22, 2012
τὶς or πᾶς may be used in the drama with the second person of the imperative: ἴτω τις, εἰσάγγελλε go, one of you, announce GG 1016
— Greek+Latin Grammar (@AncientGrammar) June 22, 2012