Latin search results for: dac
#1
noun
- declension: 1st declension
- gender: feminine
Definitions:
- dirge
- exuded gum/sap from plant
- juice
- quicksilver from ore
-
Age:
Very early forms, obsolete by classical times
-
Area:
All or none
-
Geography:
All or none
-
Frequency:
Frequent, top 2000+ words
-
Source:
Lewis & Short, “A Latin Dictionary”, 1879 (Lewis & Short)
#2
noun
- declension: 2nd declension
- gender: masculine
Definitions:
- dactyl (metrical foot long-short-short)
- long (finger-like) grape/date/mollusk
-
Age:
In use throughout the ages/unknown
-
Area:
Poetic
-
Geography:
All or none
-
Frequency:
For Dictionary, in top 10,000 words
-
Source:
“Oxford Latin Dictionary”, 1982 (OLD)
#3
adjective
Definitions:
- dactylic
- of/characterized by dactyls (metric foot long-short-short)
-
Age:
In use throughout the ages/unknown
-
Area:
Poetic
-
Geography:
All or none
-
Frequency:
2 or 3 citations
-
Source:
“Oxford Latin Dictionary”, 1982 (OLD)
#4
noun
- declension: 1st declension
- gender: feminine
Definitions:
- (and its contents)
- box/case/casket for rings
-
Age:
In use throughout the ages/unknown
-
Area:
All or none
-
Geography:
All or none
-
Frequency:
2 or 3 citations
-
Source:
“Oxford Latin Dictionary”, 1982 (OLD)
#5
noun
- declension: 3rd declension
- gender: neuter
Definitions:
- digital print
-
Age:
Coined recently, words for new things (19th-21st centuries)
-
Area:
Technical, Architecture, Topography, Surveying
-
Geography:
All or none
-
Frequency:
2 or 3 citations
-
Source:
Calepinus Novus, “Modern Latin”, by Guy Licoppe (Cal)
#6
noun
- declension: 1st declension
- gender: feminine
Definitions:
- (old form of lacrima)
- tear (usu. pl.), weeping, shedding of tears
-
Age:
Very early forms, obsolete by classical times
-
Area:
All or none
-
Geography:
All or none
-
Frequency:
Having only single citation in Oxford Latin Dictionary or Lewis + Short
-
Source:
“Oxford Latin Dictionary”, 1982 (OLD)
#7
noun
- declension: 3rd declension
- gender: feminine
Definitions:
- (long like a finger)
- kind of grape
-
Age:
In use throughout the ages/unknown
-
Area:
Agriculture, Flora, Fauna, Land, Equipment, Rural
-
Geography:
All or none
-
Frequency:
Having only single citation in Oxford Latin Dictionary or Lewis + Short
-
Source:
Lewis & Short, “A Latin Dictionary”, 1879 (Lewis & Short)