- clepsydra (Merriam-Webster)
- dactylography (Wordsmith)
Latinitweets:
adverb: ecce! , indeclinable => look! http://t.co/Ek3k0x9CkU #Latin #Vocab #LatinVocab
— LatinVocab (@LatinVocab) March 1, 2013
subitus: sudden: adjective. Example sentence:Etiam fortes viri subitis periculis terrentur.Translation:Even br… http://t.co/0IZ81DOMr8
— Latin Language (@latinlanguage) March 1, 2013
mītesco (mitisco), ĕre
to become mild or mellow, to grow ripe (of fruits, to lose their roughness or harsh flavor; class.)
— Charlton T. Lewis (@LewisandShort) February 28, 2013
ἀρείων [ᾱ], ον, gen. ονος,
Comp. of ἀγαθός, cf. ἄριστος: —better, stouter, braver,
II. ἀρείονες, οἱ, a kind of snail or slug— Henry George Liddell (@LiddellAndScott) February 28, 2013
A word like mēns, mentis, by the suffix ōn-, gave mentiō > men + tiō, gave rise to a new type of abstract -tiō: as, lēgā-tiō, embassy AG 233
— Greek+Latin Grammar (@AncientGrammar) February 28, 2013