Old language with established literature or use; may survive as a precusor to modern language.
1The offer was refused, however, in the following classical language:
2She used sarcasm couched in such classical language that the targets of her shafts only wished she would wax profane and vulgar.
3War is a survival, like the classical languages, for example.
4Board and lodging, ancient poetry, the classical languages, all the good things at once!
5Attacks on the classics by men ignorant of the classical languages tend to perpetuate the superstition.
6Generally French, German, and English have an advantage over the classical languages in point of accuracy.
7No doubt the classical languages would have been required, to some extent, in matriculating to enter college.
8They used to have a very odd way of teaching the classical languages when I was a boy.
9The education at school was of course chiefly in the classical languages; he acquired a sufficient mastery of Latin.
10That is left to the scholarly folk who eat their meals in the sacred classical languages of the past.
11One was the revival of learning, which made popular again the study of the classics and the classical languages.
12The project of the First Consul instituted thirty-two Lycées, intended for instruction in the classical languages and in the sciences.
13My basic training in the classical languages took place at the University of British Columbia, where I completed my B.A.
14This 'Chronicle' is the oldest and most important work of the kind produced outside of the classical languages in Europe.
15Taste for the classical languages had aroused a lively interest in Hebrew and a desire to know the Scriptures in the original.
16The New Yorker, May 15, 1937 P. 37 Intrigues to make Classical Languages popular with the students.
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Translations for classical language