ClassicalLatin, with the exception of Tacitus, is cold-blooded and self-satisfied.
2
Alice's Adventures in Wonderland has been translated into about 100 languages, including classicalLatin.
3
They had trapped me there with my Other-made monk's hood and my classicalLatin.
4
No classicalLatin author is given; the education in Latin was finished at the Grammar School.
5
IN POETAS] because Colet allowed classicalLatin poetry to be read in his new school.
6
He wanted to return to classicalLatin.
7
Their language is merely ClassicalLatin with a Tuscan accent and with some rather idiosyncratic grammatical errors.
8
The splendour of classicalLatin was short-lived.
9
TONITRUI] This form occurs in the Vulgate; but in classicalLatin the singular follows the fourth declension.
10
[Footnote: On the new words in classicalLatin, see Quintilian, Inst.
11
He wanted to clarify, comment, give details, and he felt how awkward classicalLatin is to decompose ideas and render shades.
12
'And you still read Latin, classicalLatin, easily?'
13
SUMPTO... PUSILLO] This substantival use of a neuter adjective is confined in classicalLatin to the nominative and accusative cases.
14
Gradually in each country new and vigorous tongues arose, related to, yet different from, the old classicalLatin in pronunciation, grammar, and vocabulary.
15
Some of the cardinals would struggle to answer but their Latin was "on the spaghetti side", Foster said, meaning closer to Italian than classicalLatin.
16
"KNOWLEDGE itself is power," Sir Francis Bacon wrote in classicalLatin, and in abbreviated form the proverb became a familiar in households and universities alike.