Classical Words of the Day May 14, 2013 ~ David Meadows ~ rogueclassicist requite (Merriam-Webster) equivocate (Wordsmith) phlyarologist (Worthless … have to remember this one) thalassotherapy (Wordnik) Linguatweets: verb 3 deponent: morior , mori, mortuus sum => die http://t.co/Ek3k0x9CkU #Latin #Vocab #LatinVocab — LatinVocab (@LatinVocab) May 14, 2013 eventum: outcome, result: noun. Example sentence:Caesare imperium tenente eventum timeo.Translation:Since Caes… http://t.co/jUxr3Kbe1h — Latin Language (@latinlanguage) May 14, 2013 planta, ae, f.—Any veget. part that serves to propagate e.g. a sprout, shoot, twig—A young tree, a shrub—A sole, sole of the foot — Charlton T. Lewis (@LewisandShort) May 13, 2013 ἀσπ-ασμός, ὁ— greeting, embrace—generally, salutation—affection, opp. μῖσος — Henry George Liddell (@LiddellAndScott) May 14, 2013 ὡς is oft used w/ a participle in ind. disc. to mark subject’s attitude: δῆλος ἦν Κῦρος ὡς σπεύδων Cyrus was plainly bent on haste GG 2120 — Greek+Latin Grammar (@AncientGrammar) May 13, 2013 Iactetur bloggus:TwitterFacebookRedditEmailLike this:Like Loading... Related Published by David Meadows ~ rogueclassicist View all posts by David Meadows ~ rogueclassicist