➠ LATIN - 5 Letters : Crossword Clue

We have 1 Solutions

  • - What was heard in Rome and a quarter of Paris?
  • - A quarter of Paris
  • - Word after pig or before Quarter
  • - Quarter of Paris
  • - Quarter preceder
  • - Quarter in Paris
  • - Paris Quarter
  • - Quarter type in Paris
  • - Quarter of fame
  • - Parisian quarter
  • - Famed quarter
  • - Quarter
  • - "Per se" and "quid pro quo" language
  • - 'In varietate concordia' language
  • - city can produce tongue
  • - Where six is sex
  • - Left a top thesis in a very old language
  • - ...... American, style of ballroom dancing
  • - left a can of tongue
  • - Spoken by Romans
  • - Language that gave us the phrase "Mea culpa"
  • - Adam was not into Dalmatian but another language
  • - amas class
  • - the french money regularly used by caesar
  • - lorem ipsum's language
  • - Returning with a woman: fifty, olive-skinned and brown-eyed?
  • - 17, for example, could be the french metal
  • - language of the tridentine mass
  • - south american type used in cicero
  • - language that gave us "e.g."
  • - Form of communication used in Roman times
  • - Language, almost dead, cool
  • - city can provide language
  • - most of english, root-wise
  • - students may decline to learn it
  • - tongue, it seems, is a pound a tin
  • - the french can produce language
  • - Figure the anti-revolutionary is not English
  • - Language that gave us 'ad hoc'
  • - livia's language
  • - whence the abbreviations "e.g." and "i.e."
  • - ... Grammys
  • - Official Vatican language
  • - Language that gave us 'i.e.'
  • - The French can get a dead language
  • - roman catholic left at home
  • - Language that comes in for some slating
  • - italian ancestor
  • - Etchant reversed an ancient language
  • - Initially language almost turned Italian now
  • - In which the Romans had been lying about starting trouble
  • - Old language the French preserve
  • - People no longer speak it, but Upman can
  • - Language of many mottos and prayers
  • - Language once used in school at Inverness?
  • - Felix is happy in it
  • - Like many a motto
  • - Language used in many university mottoes
  • - For centuries it was the language of the masses
  • - "veni, vidi, vici" language
  • - Dominant language of the Roman Republic
  • - tongue for tacitus
  • - a dead language
  • - Language of "E pluribus unum"
  • - gelatine around the tongue
  • - What Cicero spoke
  • - Dead language
  • - Cicero's tongue
  • - Cato's tongue
  • - Mass language
  • - Livy's tongue
  • - Virgil's tongue
  • - Tiberius' tongue
  • - Old Roman language
  • - Exempli gratia, e.g.
  • - Livy's language
  • - Legal language
  • - "Aeneid" language
  • - Vulgate's language
  • - The talk of the Forum?
  • - Source of much legalese
  • - Language of Lucretius
  • - Julius Caesar's language
  • - Desi Arnaz, e.g.
  • - Classic subject
  • - Caesar spoke it
  • - Word with lover or America
  • - Word with "America" or "lover"
  • - What Seneca spoke
  • - What Forum addresses were in
  • - What Caesar spoke
  • - Trajan's tongue
  • - Tongue of Tiberius
  • - Tiberius's tongue
  • - The tongue of Tiberius
  • - Taxonomy language
  • - Tacitus's tongue
  • - Source of much of English
  • - Source of much medical terminology
  • - Sine qua non e.g.
  • - Seneca's tongue
  • - Root of many of our words
  • - Root of all Romance languages
  • - Roman language
  • - Quorum's origin
  • - Quo vadis for example
  • - Pig language?
  • - Parent of romance languages
  • - Nero's tongue
  • - Mr. Chips's class in "Goodbye, Mr. Chips"
  • - Mass communication medium?
  • - Lucan's tongue
  • - Low, Vulgar or Late
  • - Like the alphabet in Vatican City ... or each letter in the starred answers
  • - Like salsa music
  • - Like most South Americans
  • - Like many inscriptions
  • - Like ego and ergo
  • - Like Cugat's rhythm
  • - Like about half of American states' mottos
  • - Like "E pluribus unum"
  • - Language with no single word for "yes"
  • - Language of the masses, once
  • - Language of the masses no longer
  • - Language of science
  • - Language of many courtroom phrases
  • - Language of Cicero
  • - Language for legal terminology
  • - It can be vulgar
  • - Iced Earth "In Sacred Flames" language
  • - Hogwarts motto language
  • - Helloween "Laudate Dominum" language
  • - Galba's tongue
  • - Forum tongue
  • - Follower of Low or Vulgar
  • - Exempli gratia, for example
  • - Caesar's medium
  • - Brazilian e.g.
  • - Amo, veni, ubi, etc.
  • - Amo, esse, ego, etc.
  • - Alternative to vernacular, historically
  • - "Amo, amas" class
  • - "Ad hominem" source
  • - . . . in this language
  • - One of the Americas
  • - Old tongue
  • - Romance Languages ancestor
  • - ......-Roman
  • - Ancient tongue
  • - South American.
  • - Homo sapiens, e.g.
  • - School course
  • - Seminary subject
  • - Like 'alter ego' and 'alma mater'
  • - Caesar's language
  • - Like 'aurum' for gold and 'ferrum' for iron
  • - Mass medium
  • - Pig ...... (silly language)
  • - Language of the Roman Empire
  • - Classical language
  • - Horace's poetry is written in it
  • - Cato's language
  • - Virgil's language
  • - Language of law
  • - Pig ...... (pseudo-language)
  • - Mostly dead -- and popular -- language
  • - Language of "mea culpa"
  • - What's learner doing now? Language
  • - Language of ancient Rome
  • - Foreign language seen on U.S. money
  • - Forum language
  • - Language of many state mottos
  • - Language of old Romans
  • - Language for the Masses?
  • - Music store category
  • - Language of the Masses
  • - "Et cetera" language
  • - Nero's language
  • - Language of old Rome
  • - Much of legalese
  • - Language of 15-Across 4-Down
  • - "Carpe diem" language
  • - 'Id est,' e.g
  • - Language learned by seminarians
  • - Good language to know for this puzzle
  • - Ancestor of Italian
  • - What most college mottoes are in
  • - The language of ancient Rome
  • - What Rowling learned at Exeter
  • - What Julius Caesar spoke
  • - Language on all current U.S. coins
  • - Ancient language
  • - Ab absurdo language
  • - Cicero wrote in it
  • - Some disapproval at insolent language
  • - Classical tongue
  • - Some scornful at ingrate's language
  • - Caesar's tongue
  • - Classic language
  • - 'E pluribus unum' language
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