- etiolate (Merriam Webster)
Linguatweets:
adjective: dirus , dira, dirum => dreadful http://t.co/wkhp7tBvWL #Latin #Vocab #LatinVocab
— LatinVocab (@LatinVocab) September 5, 2013
exitus: end: noun
Example sentence
Translation
Exitus acta probat.
The … http://t.co/79ZNBsKo4N
— Latin Language (@latinlanguage) September 5, 2013
*loquor, loqui, locutus sum* – to speak, to talk, to say #etymology of English adjective "loquacious" – talkative; excessively wordy
— Latin Vocabulary (@latinwordaday) July 26, 2013
findo, fĭdi, fissum
—to cleave, split, part, separate, divide— Charlton T. Lewis (@LewisandShort) September 3, 2013
συκό-βῑος, ον
—living on figs: living by slander— Henry George Liddell (@LiddellAndScott) September 3, 2013
Instead of -τερος, -τατος or -ῑων, -ιστος the adverbs μᾶλλον more, μάλιστα most, may be used w/ the positive; μᾶλλον φίλος more dear GG 323
— Greek+Latin Grammar (@AncientGrammar) September 3, 2013