[Home]History of Latin language/Lexicon

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Revision 8 . . (edit) October 14, 2001 6:25 am by Josh Grosse
Revision 7 . . (edit) September 18, 2001 11:27 pm by Josh Grosse
Revision 3 . . September 10, 2001 9:56 am by MichaelTinkler [added case for 'ante', reservation about page]
  

Difference (from prior major revision) (minor diff, author diff)

Added: 4a5,6


a / abAway from, ByPrep. + Ablative case noun
adUp to, Near, ForPrep. + Accusative case noun

Changed: 7c9,11

dies, -esDayNoun



dies, -ei, m/fDayNoun
deDown from, aboutPrep. + Ablative case noun
e / exOut ofPrep. + Ablative case noun

Added: 8a13,21









in
in
In, On
Into, Onto
Prep. + Ablative case noun
Prep. + Accusative case noun
is, ea, idThis, That, He, She, ItDemonstrative pronoun/adjective
lex, legisLawNoun
nihil / nil, nNothingNoun (indeclinable)
proIn front of, On behalf ofPrep. + Ablative case noun
postAfter, BehindPrep. + Accusative case noun
quis, quid
quis?, quid?
Something, Anything, Anyone
Who?, What?
Indefinite pronoun
Interrogative pronoun
sum, esse, fui, futurusTo beCopulative verb
superAbove, On top ofPrep. + Abl/Acc?

Changed: 13c26,28
I'm uncertain as to the real utility of this. If we want someone to use a real lexicon, there are such things on line. I don't want to have every word in the Latin Phrases list construed here! And do people who don't know Latin know what the abbreviated forms -um and -a are (and they're not in the order American English speakers use) or what -ere, -i mean? That's enough of a problem for first year Latin students using a real dictionary. --MichaelTinkler, former high school Latin teacher
I'm uncertain as to the real utility of this. If we want someone to use a real lexicon, there are such things on line. I don't want to have every word in the Latin Phrases list construed here! And do people who don't know Latin know what the abbreviated forms -um and -a are (and they're not in the order American English speakers use) or what -ere, -i mean? That's enough of a problem for first year Latin students using a real dictionary. --MichaelTinkler, former high school Latin teacher

See Greek language/Lexicon. I'm not intending a complete list, just some words that are exceedingly common in sayings or derivatives. On Euglenids, for instance, it mentions that Euglena comes from the Greek eu and glene, and links back to that page so people can see what they mean. Doesn't that sort of thing seem handy to you?

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