- admonish (Merriam-Webster)
- Parnassian (OED)
- titubate (Wordnik)
Latinitweets:
preposition: in , + ablative (also used as prefix with verbs) => in, on http://t.co/Ek3k0x9CkU #Latin #Vocab #LatinVocab
— LatinVocab (@LatinVocab) April 19, 2013
reverentia: respect: noun. Example sentence:Maxima debetur puero reverentia. Translation:The greatest respect … http://t.co/vdmWh1WOaN
— Latin Language (@latinlanguage) April 19, 2013
ŏpĭcus, a, um
— a fuller form for Opsus, Obscus & Oscus
—transf., clownish, rude, stupid, ignorant, foolish
—rough, coarse, unpolished— Charlton T. Lewis (@LewisandShort) April 18, 2013
δοξ-άζω
—think, imagine
—c. acc. cogn. δόξας δ. entertain opinions
—abs. form/hold an opinion
—Pass. to be matter of opinion
—magnify, extol— Henry George Liddell (@LiddellAndScott) April 18, 2013
Greek Adverbs are often used to set forth clearly relations of time, manner, cause, etc. implied in the CIRCUMSTANTIAL PARTICIPLE. GG 2079
— Greek+Latin Grammar (@AncientGrammar) April 18, 2013