Similar words: electroplating, rating, relation, relative, palatial, operating, creating, violation. Meaning: ['lætɪn] n. 1. any dialect of the language of ancient Rome 2. an inhabitant of ancient Latium 3. a person who is a member of those peoples whose languages derived from Latin. adj. 1. of or relating to the ancient Latins or the Latin language 2. having or resembling the psychology or temper characteristic of people of Latin America 3. relating to people or countries speaking Romance languages 4. relating to languages derived from Latin 5. of or relating to the ancient region of Latium.
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91. The Puerto Rican sweepers carried transistors playing Latin music.
92. The Latin words died, replaced by ones in patois.
93. The Latin names of the gods are used.
94. It is a Latin translation of a Greek manuscript.
95. Latin America's religious topography is changing rapidly.
96. Latin America faces a growing debt problem.
97. Loud Latin words in a clerical voice.
98. We have to conjugate these verbs in Latin.
99. The Spanish government announced that it would invest over $14,000 million in the Latin American region.
100. Cuba was seen as a base for Communist activity throughout Latin America.
101. But he demanded high standards and as a classical scholar was exasperated by my inability to cope with Latin.
102. This extravaganza will feature vibrant sounds from almost every Latin country on the map.
103. Almost in spite of himself,(www.Sentencedict.com) he did well at Latin.
104. Latin America is a world where primitive ways of life exist near ultra-modern cities. Altogether, it is a continent full of vitality.
105. Notoriously these words have crept into ordinary usage from medieval philosophical Latin.
106. Mr Liebenow worries that widespread disappointment, combined with domestic pressures, will prompt some Latin nations to step backward.
107. But on the Latin battlefields he is not a man, but a fearful prodigy.
108. He has also revealed notes written in the margins of Latin manuscripts by Gothic hands and then rubbed out by later owners.
109. It probably loses something in the translation from the original Latin.
110. I have recently bought five,[sentencedict.com] but I don't know the Latin name.
111. Tutor and pupil may, however, have spoken Latin to each other.
112. Father Poole closed his eyes and joined his hands, Latin phrases stumbling over his tongue.
113. Only because we see them as mere breeds are they confined within a single Latin name.
114. The trade name Permutit was given to this patented ion exchange process, it being derived from the Latin verb to exchange.
115. At times I went almost mad, talking gibberish, pulling faces, and singing in mock Latin.
116. Quote a Latin tag at him by mistake and he will examine his shoes or smile brazenly back at you.
117. But the Anglicans, like the Lutherans, did not suddenly give up the composition of Latin texts.
118. Annatto is a small seed used in Latin American cookery.
119. If you're asking me about Latin, you're asking the wrong person.
120. Varro seems to have stated that in his time Massalia was trilingual, the two foreign languages being of course Latin and Celtic.
More similar words: electroplating, rating, relation, relative, palatial, operating, creating, violation, isolation, inflation, relatively, regulation, population, revelation, installation, legislative, correlation, legislation, translation, speculation, calculation, devastating, fascinating, at intervals, relationship, in relation to, concentrating, late, flat, later.