Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
This feminine name comes from a late Latin word rosa.
In late Latin, it could also simply mean "triple".
The table below is ordered according to the latest Latin alphabet:
It is a Late Latin word, derived from the Greek.
The word originates from Late Latin gramma - a small weight.
The name probably comes from late Latin soccus, meaning slipper.
Langley worked on one of the late Latin editions, and abridged his original by about two-thirds.
Although recognizing "late antiquity" he does not recognize Late Latin.
The vowel-length distinction began to fade by Late Latin.
The word at the base is in-flammare (late Latin).
The name Ascella from a Late Latin word meaning armpit.
The Late Latin term constellātiō can be translated as "set with stars".
A champion (from the late Latin campio) is the victor in a challenge, contest or competition.
The specific name fuliginosa is late Latin for "sooty".
Both evolved regularly and independently from Late Latin *tropator, *tropatoris.
In turn, Late Latin also included borrowings from Greek.
According to the narrowest definitions, Late Latin did not exist and the authors of the times are to be considered medieval.
Clemens is both a Late Latin masculine given name and a surname meaning "merciful".
This manuscript is also important because it contains the first written sample of an early Italian language different from Late Latin.
Captain was derived from the Late Latin word capitaneus (meaning head man or chief).
The Silver Age was extended a century and the final four centuries represent Late Latin.
It comes from Late Latin, meaning "sing with another" (ad + cantor).
Beef is cognate with bovine through the Late Latin bovīnus.
Decanus means "chief of ten" in Late Latin.
The generic name means "burdock" in late Latin and originated in the Greek language.