Latin | English |
---|---|
glos noun F | sister-in-law(wife's sister) |
glosa [glosae] (1st) F noun | glossary, collection / list of unfamiliar / unusual words (needing interpretation)noun |
glosarium [glosarii] (2nd) N noun | unusual word requiring explanation (contemptuous diminutive)noun |
glosema [glosematis] (3rd) N noun | |
glossa [glossae] (1st) F noun | glossary, collection / list of unfamiliar / unusual words (needing interpretation)noun |
glossarium, index verborum noun N | associative array(An array-like data structure) |
glossema [glossematis] (3rd) N noun | |
Anglosaxones (in plural) noun M-Pl | Anglo-Saxon(member of the Germanic peoples who settled in England during the early fifth century) |
arnoglossa [arnoglossae] (1st) F noun | |
buglossa [buglossae] (1st) F noun | bugloss (herb) (prickly ox-tongue, Helminthia echioides?)noun |
buglossos [buglossi] noun F | bugloss (herb) (prickly ox-tongue, Helminthia echioides?)noun |
cynoglossos [cynoglossi] noun F | |
diglossos [diglossi] noun F | diglossia, using two forms of language is modern 1960noun plant (sedum alum)noun |
isoglossa noun | isogloss [isoglosses](line indicating geographical boundaries of a linguistic feature) |
lingua anglosaxonica proper noun F | Old English(ancestor language of modern English) |