Cicero

Etymology
Borrowed from, a cognomen in reference to warts (. The Latinate form, based on the nominative, displaced Middle English , based on the oblique stem.

Proper noun

 * 1) The Roman statesman and orator Mārcus Tullius Cicerō (106–43 BC).
 * Former name:
 * Former name:
 * Former name:
 * Former name:
 * Former name:
 * Former name:

Translations

 * Arabic: شِيشِرُون
 * Armenian: Կիկերոն
 * Azerbaijani:
 * Abjad: سیسرون
 * Roman: Siseron
 * Belarusian: Цыцэро́н
 * Bulgarian: Цицеро̀н
 * Catalan: Ciceró
 * Chinese:
 * Mandarin:
 * Esperanto: Cicerono
 * Finnish: Cicero
 * French:
 * Georgian: ციცერონი
 * German:
 * Greek:
 * Ancient: Κικέρων
 * Hungarian:
 * Italian: Marco Tullio Cicerone
 * Japanese: キケロ
 * Korean: ^키케로
 * Latin:
 * Macedonian: Цицерон, Кикерон
 * Marathi: सिसेरो, किकेरो
 * Occitan: Ciceron
 * Ottoman Turkish: سیسەرون, چیچرون, چیچەرو
 * Polish: Cyceron
 * Portuguese:
 * Romanian: Cicero
 * Russian:
 * Sicilian: Ciciruni
 * Spanish:
 * Ukrainian: Цицеро́н

Etymology
From.

Etymology
From its use in publishing 's 1468 edition of Cicero's Epistulae ad Familiares ("Letters to My Friends").

Noun

 * 1)  cicero, the 5th of the 7 traditional German sizes of type, between Korpus and Mittel, standardized as 12 point.

Etymology
From, probably in reference to an ancestor’s warts (as none can be seen in any of his portrayals, all done during a time when it was commonplace for artists to sculpt their clients as they were).