Latin Dictionary Home›Latin-English›vādoLatin - English Dictionary Search within inflected forms Donazionevādo intransitive verb III conjugation View the declension of this word 1 to go, to advance, to rush, to hurry 2 to walkpermalink ...
ăberrointransitive verb I conjugationView the declension of this word1 to go away, to stray, to differ2 to divert, to lose one's way3 to go wrong, to mistakepermalink‹ aberratūrūs abfluens ›Locutions, idioms and examplesab aliqua re aberro = to distance oneself from something |...
accede[verb]fromaccede < cede 【DEFINITION】 If you accede to someone's request, you do what they ask. 【PRIMARY MEANING】 come to or arrive at 【ROOTs】⑴ac(ad);to, toward⑵cede;move, go access[noun]fromaccess < cede 【...
Memorabilia -- Things to be remembered or recorded.Memoriter -- By rote.Mendaces, ebriosi, verbosi -- Liars, drunkards, and wordy people.Mens conscia recti -- A mind conscious of rectitude.Mens invicta manet -- The mind remains unsubdued....
First page of articledoi:10.1111/j.1467-968X.1855.tb00782.xT. Hewitt KeyJohn Wiley & Sons, Ltd (10.1111)Transactions of the Philological Society
abeo, abire, abii, abitum - to go away, depart; to die; to disappear (verb): abient absens, absentis - absent, away (adjective): absent accedo, accedere, accessi, accessum - to come to, approach; to agree (verb): accede, accedence, access accido, accidere, accidi - to fall...
A regular verb in Latin belongs to one of four main conjugations. A conjugation is “a class of verbs with similar inflected forms.” The conjugations are identified by the last letter of the verb’s present stem. The present stem can be found by taking the -re (or -ri, in the case...
Latin to EnglishorEnglish to Latin; Multi-choice answersoryou type in the answer; Includeorexclude verb principal parts as well as the first principal part; All wordsorjust those beginning with certain letters,orspecific grammatical entities, e.g Verbs 2nd Conjugation, Nouns 3rd declension. ...
* detailed verb tables covering 120 regular verbs and more than 300 irregular verbs * supplements on Roman history, life, and culture * special section of Latin words and phrases used in contemporary English: carpe diem, quid pro quo, et cetera ...
Here you will find the paradigm of the verb "amare" ("to love"): amo, amare, amavi, amatus. I love, to love, I (have) loved, loved. Some verbs are impersonal, i.e., they only exist in the third person singular. (Example: miseret, miserere, miseruit, miseritum. It is a pity...