Latinism
English
Etymology
Noun
Latinism (plural Latinisms)
- Any word or phrase borrowed from Latin, or suggestive of Latin.
- 2010, Ti Alkire, Carol Rosen, Romance Languages: a historical introduction page 325:
- [discussing numquam in the Old French portion of the Oaths of Strasbourg] a Latinizing spelling, maybe a pure Latinism, not surviving in modern French (but cf. Old French onques < umquam ‘ever’). Note the double negative, literally ‘will never make no pact’
Coordinate terms
foreignismsedit
- Akkadianism / Akkadism
- Americanism
- Amharism
- Anglicism
- Arabism
- Aramaism
- Armenism
- Australianism
- Batavism
- Belorussianism
- Bengalism
- Briticism
- Bulgarism
- Catalanism
- Church Slavicism / Church Slavonicism / Slavonicism
- Croatism
- Czechism / Bohemism / Bohemianism
- Gallicism / Frenchism
- Germanism / Teutonism
- Grecism / Hellenism
- Hebraism
- Hispanism / Hispanicism / Castilianism
- Hungarianism / Magyarism
- Indianism
- Iranianism
- Irishism
- Italianism / Italicism
- Japanism
- Kazakhism
- Latinism
- Macedonianism
- Mandaism
- Moravianism
- New Zealandism
- Persianism
- Polonism
- Portuguesism
- Russianism
- Scotticism
- Serbism
- Serbo-Croatism
- Sinicism
- Slavism
- Slovenism / Pannonianism
- Sumerianism / Sumerism
- Syriacism
- Turkism
- Ukrainism / Ukrainianism
- Uzbekism
- Yiddishism
Derived terms
Translations
Latinism