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Latinism
[ lat-n-iz-uhm ]
noun
- a mode of expression derived from or imitative of Latin.
Latinism
/ ˈlætɪˌnɪzəm /
noun
- a word, idiom, or phrase borrowed from Latin
Other Words From
- an·ti-Lat·in·ism noun
- pro-Lat·in·ism noun
Word History and Origins
Example Sentences
Plants and animals already had names in indigenous languages, and Linnaeus, in a show of imperialism, renamed them with his Latinisms.
His style, modelled on that of Thucydides and unreservedly praised by Photius, is on the whole pure, though somewhat rhetorical and showing a fondness for Latinisms.
Only in Africa did “Latinism” fail to take root permanently.
The pedantic race, in their furious Latinisms, bristling with polysyllabic pomposity, deemed themselves fortunate when they could fall upon “dark words,” which our critic aptly describes “catching an ink-horn term by the tail.”
All these archaisms, neologisms, Latinisms, compound words, and dialectic and technical expressions, Malherbe set about to eradicate from the French language.
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