BIGpedia.com - Latin - Encyclopedia and Dictionary Online
dictionary search

Latin

Table of contents

Noun

Latin (countable and uncountable), plural Latins

  1. Language of the ancient Romans (proper noun, uncountable) (Classical Latin )
  2. A person native to ancient Rome or its Empire
  3. A person who is descended from the ancient Romans
  4. A person whose native tongue is one descended from Latin, such as Spanish, French, Italian, etc.

Translations

  • Alsatian: Latein n (1)
  • Asturian: llatinu m (1)
  • Breton: latin m (1), Roman m (2), unan a ra gant ur yezh romanek (4)
  • Catalan: llatí m, llatina f
  • Chinese: 拉丁语 (Lati?) (1),拉丁人 (2)
  • Czech: latin (1)
  • Dutch: Latijn n
  • Esperanto: Latin (1)
  • Finnish: latina (1), roomalainen (2), romaanisen kielen puhuja (4)
  • French: latin m
  • German: Latein n (1), Römer m (2–3), Muttersprachler einer romanischen Sprache m (4)
  • Greek: Λατινικά (Latinika) (el )
  • Hebrew: לטינית (Latinit)
  • Hungarian: Latin (1)
  • Ido: Latin (1)
  • Interlingua: latino
  • Italian: latino m
  • Japanese: ラテン語 (Ratengo) (1)
  • Korean: 로마 (Roma) (2)
  • Latin: (lingua) Latina (1), latinus m, latina f (2)
  • Polish: łaciński (1), łaciń (2)
  • Portuguese: latin m (1)
  • Romanian: (limbă ) latină (1), latin (2)
  • Russian: Латинский (Latinsky, older: Latinskii) (1), Латин (Latin) (2)
  • Slovak: latinčina f (1); Riman m, Rimanka f (2); Roman m, Romanka f (3, 4)
  • Romanica: latino m
  • Slovenian: latinščina f (1), Rimljan m (2)
  • Spanish: latín (1), latino, -a (2–4)
  • Swedish: latin (1), romare (2,3)
  • Tatar: Latín (1)
  • Ukrainian: Латинська (Latins'ka) (1)

Adjective

Latin

  1. Having to do with the language spoken in ancient Rome.
  2. Having to do with ancient Rome or its Empire.
  3. Denoting involvement with the customs and people descended from the ancient Romans and their Empire.
  4. Of Latin America (i.e., Mexico, Central, and South America)

Translations

Related Terms

See Also

External links




The contents of this article are licensed from Wikipedia.org under the GNU Free Documentation License.
How to see transparent copy

08-19-2006 13:26:44