"Latinized" is a word in ENGLISH
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A guy comes walking into a bar with a turtle in his hand. The turtle's one eye is black and blue, two of his legs are bandaged, and his whole shell is taped together with duct tape. The bartender looks at the guy and asks: "What's wrong with your turtle?" "Not a thing," the man responds, this beat up turtle is faster than your dog!" "Not a chance!", replies the barkeep. "Okay then, says the guy... you take your dog and let him stand at one end of the bar. Then go and stand at the other end of the room and call your dog. I'll bet you $500 that before your dog reaches you, my turtle will be there." So the bartender, thinking it's an easy $500, agrees. The bartender goes to the other side of the bar, and on the count of three calls his dog. Suddenly the guy picks up his turtle and throws it across the room, narrowly missing the bartender, and smashing into the wall and says - "I WIN... Told you it'll be there before your dog!"
The first letter of the English and of many other alphabets. The capital A of the alphabets of Middle and …
Read the complete definitionFr. (L. Latin: habendum et tenendum.) To have and to hold
Read the complete definitionA prefix in many words of Latin origin. It signifies from, away , separating, or departure, as in abduct, abstract, …
Read the complete definitionApplied to one of the cases of the noun in Latin and some other languages, -- the fundamental meaning of …
Read the complete definitionApplied to the case (as the fourth case of Latin and Greek nouns) which expresses the immediate object on which …
Read the complete definitionIn pleading. The Latin name of that part of a special plea which follows next .after the statement of appearance …
Read the complete definitionLatin: For greater security.
Read the complete definitionFor a term which has passed, words In the Latin form of the writ of entry employed at common law …
Read the complete definitionA diphthong in the Latin language; used also by the Saxon writers. It answers to the Gr. ai. The Anglo-Saxon …
Read the complete definitionIn the law of descents. Re-lations by the father. This word is used in the Scotch law, and by some …
Read the complete definitionA prefix meaning about, around; -- used in words derived from the Latin.
Read the complete definitionA word in one language corresponding with one in another; an analogous term; as, the Latin \"pater\" is the analogue …
Read the complete definitionA metrical foot consisting of three syllables, the first two short, or unaccented, the last long, or accented (/ / …
Read the complete definitionIn English. A term formerly used ln pleading when a thlng ls described both ln Latin and English, inserted immediately …
Read the complete definitionA Latin preposition and prefix; akin to Gr. 'anti`, Skr. anti, Goth. and-, anda- (only in comp.), AS. and-, ond-, …
Read the complete definitionA collection of Sax-on laws, published during the reign of Queen Elizabeth, iu the Saxon language, with a* Latin version …
Read the complete definitionA ludicrous corruption of the Latin word ergo, therefore.
Read the complete definitionOne of a primitive people supposed to have lived in prehistoric times, in Central Asia, east of the Caspian Sea, …
Read the complete definitionIn the civil law. A Latin translation of the Novels of Justinian by an anonymous author; so called because the …
Read the complete definitionOne who administered the Eucharist with unleavened bread; -- a name of reproach given by those of the Greek church …
Read the complete definition