Adjective

Latin (not comparable)

  1. Of or relating to the language spoken in ancient Rome.
  2. Of or relating to the script of the language spoken in ancient Rome and many modern alphabets.
  3. Of or relating to ancient Rome or its Empire.
  4. Of or relating to the customs and people descended from the ancient Romans and their Empire.
  5. Of or relating to Latium (modern Lazio), the region around Rome.
  6. Of or from Latin America or of Latin American culture.

Derived terms

From Wiktionary under the GNU Free Documentation License.
Wed Jul 28 15:14:01 2010

Latin (lingua latīna, IPA: [laˈtiːna]) or sometimes Roman is an Italic language originally spoken in Latium and Ancient Rome. Although often considered a dead language, in view of the fact that it has no native, fluent speakers, Latin continues to be taught in schools and has been, and currently is, used in the process of new word production in modern languages from many different families, including English. Latin and its daughter Romance languages are the only surviving branch of the Italic language family. Other branches, known as Italic languages, are attested in documents surviving from early Italy, but were assimilated during the Roman Republic. The one possible exception is Venetic, the language of the people who settled Venetia, who in Roman times spoke their language in parallel with Latin.

The extensive use of elements from vernacular speech by the earliest authors and inscriptions of the Roman Republic make it clear that the original, unwritten language of the Roman Monarchy was a colloquial form only partly reconstructable called Vulgar Latin. By the late Roman Republic literate persons mainly at Rome had created a standard form from the spoken language of the educated and empowered now called Classical Latin, then called simply Latin or Latinity. The term Vulgar Latin came to mean the various dialects of the citizenry. With the Roman conquest, Latin spread to countries around the Mediterranean, and the vernacular dialects spoken in these areas developed into the Romance languages, including Aragonese, Catalan, Corsican, French, Italian, Portuguese, Romanian, Sardinian, and Spanish. Classical Latin, however, continued to develop after the fall of the Roman Empire and through the Middle Ages, and was used as the language of international communication, scholarship and science until the 18th century, when it was supplanted by vernacular languages.

Latin is a highly inflected language, with three distinct genders, seven noun cases, four verb conjugations, six tenses, six persons, three moods, two voices, two aspects and a distinction between singular and plural number. A dual number is rare and archaic. One of the seven cases is the locative case, generally only used with place nouns. The vocative is nearly identical to the nominative. There are only five fully productive cases; accordingly, different authors list 5, 6 or 7 as the number of cases. Adjectives and adverbs are compared, and adjectives are inflected for case, gender, and number. Although Latin has demonstrative pronouns indicating varying degree of closeness, it lacks articles. Later Romance language articles developed from the demonstative pronouns; e.g., le and la from ille and illa. Romance languages were created by simplification of this inflectional complexity in various ways; e.g., uninflected Italian oggi ("today") from the Latin ablative case, hoc die.

From Wikipedia under the GNU Free Documentation License
Sat Jul 31 17:18:13 2010

Rashel Diaz and The Fam Go To SeaWorld - Latin Gossip
latingossip.com
Rashel Diaz and The Fam Go To SeaWorld - Latin Gossip

Latin Gossip Staff

hu, 29 Jul 2010 12:20:29 GM

by . Latin. Gossip Staff on 07.29.2010 - Listed under Chisme. Rashel Diaz_Discovery Cove 1 copy Rashel Diaz went to SeaWorld with her kids and by the looks of it had so much fun! The Telemundo host shares pics with LatinGossip.com​ of her ...

Pray the Mass: Latin Mass At St. Agnes Cathedral?
praythemass.blogspot.com
Pray the Mass: Latin Mass At St. Agnes Cathedral?

Julie

Wed, 28 Jul 2010 12:33:00 GM

Most importantly it could be a way to guide the . Latin. Mass celebrations in this diocese to a more faithful practice of the pre-Conciliar and Conciliar liturgical guidelines and help prevent a return to the unfortunate liturgical ...

 Latin American Oil & Gas Projects Review | The Forex Insider Blog
associated-press.net
Latin American Oil & Gas Projects Review | The Forex Insider Blog

The Forex Futures Administrator

hu, 29 Jul 2010 13:18:58 GM

Latin. American Oil & Gas Projects Review Rating: (out of reviews) List Price: Price: $ 360.00 Related Forex Products.

From Google Blog Search: "Latin"
Thu Jul 29 10:27:26 2010

Ecolab 2Q profit rises on overseas revenue - BusinessWeek
businessweek.com
Ecolab 2Q profit rises on overseas revenue - BusinessWeek
Wed, 28 Jul 2010 04:29:20 GMT+00:00
BusinessWeek International revenue rose 5 percent to $750 million because of strong results in Latin America and the Asia-Pacific region. Ecolab also said it kept its ... Ecolab profit in line; shares fall on outlook Reuters Ecolab 2Q Profit Up 30% On 2009 Charges, Higher Revenue Wall Street Journal Ecolab earnings up 30% but miss estimates Minneapolis Star Tribune MarketWatch (press release)  - Minneapolis / St. Paul Business Journal  - Wall Street Pit (blog)
Nominate your top pick for Grand Marshal of Latin American Parade - Everything Long Beach (press release)
everythinglongbeach.com
Nominate your top pick for Grand Marshal of Latin American Parade - Everything Long Beach (press release)
Thu, 29 Jul 2010 22:10:46 GMT+00:00
American Parade Everything Long Beach (press release) The 2nd Annual Latin American Parade & Festival will return to Downtown Long Beach on Saturday, September 25 and is seeking nominations for outstanding ...
MetLife Announces Strong Second Quarter 2010 Results - MarketWatch (press release)
marketwatch.com
MetLife Announces Strong Second Quarter 2010 Results - MarketWatch (press release)
Thu, 29 Jul 2010 20:11:43 GMT+00:00
MarketWatch (press release) Latin America premiums, fees & other revenues in the second quarter of 2009 were $503 million and $538 million, on a reported basis and constant currency ...

From Google News Search: "Latin"
Thu Jul 29 17:37:48 2010

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From Yahoo Image Search: "Latin"
Sat Jul 31 21:08:23 2010

Latin !!!!!!!!!!!!!?
Q. what part of america is Latin ?? is Latin a country/ tribe/ race name ? if yes tell me the language used in Latin . . . if it's a language name, tell me the country that use Latin . . . thx thx
Asked by Agaa A - Mon Mar 24 05:24:57 2008 - - 1 Answers - 1 Comments

A. Latin America refers to countries in South America , such as Mexico, Colombia, Brazil, Argentina etc. Latin is not a country. Latin is an ancient language used by the Romans. Latin is the base of the modern languages such as Italian, Spanish, Portuguese. Because Southern America was inhabited by Europeans who spoke Latin based languages and had Latin based ethnicity South America is also called Latin America. If you want more info visit the link below:
Answered by Archer1 - Mon Mar 24 06:06:28 2008

What was the latin phrase that Alexander said to his horse Bucephalus when the horse died in battle?
Q. What was the latin phrase that Alexander said to his horse Bucephalus when the horse died in battle?
Asked by Dio - Mon Jan 18 22:55:04 2010 - - 1 Answers - 1 Comments

A. Never happened. At the time of Alexander Latin was a language spoken by an obscure tribe on the edge of the Etruscan empire. Even if Alexander had heard of them there was no way he would speak the language.
Answered by iansand - Mon Jan 18 23:18:22 2010

What are some derivatives of the Latin word Facere?
Q. For latin homework i have to find derivatives for Facere in all different languages. I have a lot of English words such as proficient, factual, etc but i need derivatives from other languages. There are usually derivatives in French, Spanish, or Italian. Please write down even if they are only guesses. You can also give derivatives in languages other than the ones i mentioned. Thanks!
Asked by Emily Goldster - Tue Feb 2 20:50:30 2010 - - 3 Answers - 0 Comments

A. Basically, they are: French = faire (fair). Spanish = hacer (ah-sair). Portuguese = fazer (fah-zair). Italian = facere (fah-cher-ay). Rumanian (or Romanian) = a face (ah fah-chay). All of these words mean either "to make" or "to do." Some other derivatives from 'facere' in English are facile (superficial; easy to do) , facility (skill) and facilitate (to make something easier to do). Latin facilis (easy) , French facilement (fah-seel-ma~), Spanish facilmente (fah-seel-ment-ay) and Italian facilmente (fah-cheel-ment-ay) all meaning "easily" are all derived from this root too.
Answered by Brennus - Tue Feb 2 23:03:03 2010

From Yahoo Answer Search: "Latin"
Thu Jul 29 06:12:25 2010