Wiktionary:Requested entries (Latin)

Note: This page may also be used to request botanical and zoological names that may not actually be Latin.

See also:
 * Wiktionary:Requested entries:Latin/verbs
 * Category:Species entry using missing Latin specific epithet
 * Wiktionary:Requested entries:Latin/Lewis & Short
 * Wiktionary:Requested entries:Latin/etymons and Wiktionary:Requested entries:Latin/etymons/en

A

 * (-us, -um, taxonomy)
 * (taxonomy)
 * (taxonomy)
 * (anatomy)
 * - taxonomy
 * , - etymon of English
 * / - used in the etymology of "aborigines"
 * (-a, -on), (-a, -um) – from Greek . Pliny has fem. acc. agrian (book 25) which is unusual and which vowel length might be dubious: Is it agriān (like Greek ἀγρίᾱν) or agrian (similar to agriam)? And is its nominative singular agriā (like Greek ἀγρίᾱ) or agria (like in Latin)? In book 26 he has agrios and acc. agrion, in book 31 agrium.
 * , post-Classical
 * , pure Latin word for the asphodel; compare and.
 * or ?
 * (do you mean ?)
 * as plural of ?
 * (= weak), (= mixed). Together with  (= strong) used to express the concept of strong, weak and mixed declension in this German grammar: "Triplex est adjectivum, Articulatum, inarticulatum & absolutum.", "Articulata adjectiva" etc.
 * : great-grandfather's grandmother's sister - part of a Latin phrase used in law
 * — female name
 * , - should mean Aztecs, inflected forms of *Aztecus (-i, m.). Joannis Severinus Vaterus, "Linguarum totius orbis Index alphabeticus, quarum Grammaticae, Lexica, collectiones vocabulorum [...]", Berolini, MDCCCXV (1815) has "bellicosorum Aztecorum imperium" and "Aztecos e septentrionali America".
 * - New Latin, etymon of Spanish
 * - etymon of German
 * - mentioned in
 * - source: https://bitterwinter.org/the-golden-chain-and-the-world-prayer-day/
 * : as in "solis accasum" e.g. 1, 2. From, which dictionaries say does not have a supine. Is this a later supine form, or a derived 4th-declension noun ?
 * , "Arcadians both": two people who are similar in some way (a line from Virgil)
 * argumentum ad carcerum
 * argumentum ad scelestum
 * argumentum ad penalum
 * argumentum ad iustitium
 * argumentum ad lexum
 * argumentum ad criminalum
 * argumentum ad codexum
 * argumentum ad constitutium
 * argumentum ad prohibitum
 * argumentum ad legalum
 * argumentum ad illegalum
 * : as in "solis accasum" e.g. 1, 2. From, which dictionaries say does not have a supine. Is this a later supine form, or a derived 4th-declension noun ?
 * , "Arcadians both": two people who are similar in some way (a line from Virgil)
 * argumentum ad carcerum
 * argumentum ad scelestum
 * argumentum ad penalum
 * argumentum ad iustitium
 * argumentum ad lexum
 * argumentum ad criminalum
 * argumentum ad codexum
 * argumentum ad constitutium
 * argumentum ad prohibitum
 * argumentum ad legalum
 * argumentum ad illegalum

B

 * (ancient)
 * — Late Latin; whence the English and (probably) the French.
 * Could this be ?
 * (Spanish )
 * - species epithet. something to do with peas?
 * looks similar to, but wikipedia would imply a ML, NL or non-Latin misspelling of , related to = Guadalquivir.
 * - species epithet
 * - taxonomy
 * - taxonomy
 * - taxonomy
 * , - the letter B
 * , - the letter B

C

 * (Coracoidea = (obs. genus) + -oidea)
 * (taxonomy)
 * taxonomy (or mul)
 * (ML)
 * cambogia - as in Garcinia cambogia See Category:Species entry using missing Translingual specific epithet
 * candum --the phrase is "quo recipiens vas collo candum" - variant of
 * — whence the English
 * This appears to be either New Latin or "medical Latin" (i.e. English), but I can't determine which. --EncycloPetey 01:02, 15 November 2010 (UTC)
 * I think this is true New Latin. However, the term seems not to be plurale tantum in Latin: Google Books yields Latin sources when searching for, , and ( may well be out there too, but any Latin hits get drowned out by the English acronyms  and , the Spanish place-name , etc.). I'll see what I can do about creating a New Latin entry for . — I.S.M.E.T.A. 10:03, 10 March 2015 (UTC)
 * - from the etymology of
 * - supposedly the Latin name of the rock band the Beatles, according to a Latin quote on some websites: Caterva carissima mea est Cimictus = My favorite group is the Beatles.
 * claroideum as in Glomus claroideum See Category:Species entry using missing Translingual specific epithet.
 * ; e.g.: “Ovum coctillo.” = “I am poaching an egg.”
 * - comparative (in Greek form) of (from, comp. (maybe: *) ); see also . Vitruvius 3, 5, 9 and 10, 2, 5 have "colossicotera" and 10, 2, 13 has "colossici". "colossicon" does appear in Plin. 34. "Rhodi colossicum signum" does appear in Ampelius, Liber memoralis, book 8, but it depends on the editions as other editions have other forms like "Rhodi colossi signum" here. There is one and there might be two other Greek-based comparatives: /, / (e.g. Cicero, De oratore, III, 43, 171; -os/-us depends on edition).
 * -- I pity, I excite compassion (similar to commiseror?)
 * , - from the etymology of Italian
 * - the Carpathian Mountains
 * "lattice"? "basket"? see taxa: and
 * I think this is true New Latin. However, the term seems not to be plurale tantum in Latin: Google Books yields Latin sources when searching for, , and ( may well be out there too, but any Latin hits get drowned out by the English acronyms  and , the Spanish place-name , etc.). I'll see what I can do about creating a New Latin entry for . — I.S.M.E.T.A. 10:03, 10 March 2015 (UTC)
 * - from the etymology of
 * - supposedly the Latin name of the rock band the Beatles, according to a Latin quote on some websites: Caterva carissima mea est Cimictus = My favorite group is the Beatles.
 * claroideum as in Glomus claroideum See Category:Species entry using missing Translingual specific epithet.
 * ; e.g.: “Ovum coctillo.” = “I am poaching an egg.”
 * - comparative (in Greek form) of (from, comp. (maybe: *) ); see also . Vitruvius 3, 5, 9 and 10, 2, 5 have "colossicotera" and 10, 2, 13 has "colossici". "colossicon" does appear in Plin. 34. "Rhodi colossicum signum" does appear in Ampelius, Liber memoralis, book 8, but it depends on the editions as other editions have other forms like "Rhodi colossi signum" here. There is one and there might be two other Greek-based comparatives: /, / (e.g. Cicero, De oratore, III, 43, 171; -os/-us depends on edition).
 * -- I pity, I excite compassion (similar to commiseror?)
 * , - from the etymology of Italian
 * - the Carpathian Mountains
 * "lattice"? "basket"? see taxa: and
 * - the Carpathian Mountains
 * "lattice"? "basket"? see taxa: and
 * - the Carpathian Mountains
 * "lattice"? "basket"? see taxa: and
 * - the Carpathian Mountains
 * "lattice"? "basket"? see taxa: and
 * "lattice"? "basket"? see taxa: and

D

 * In Latin SoP of . As English (cp. ),  belongs to Requested entries (English).
 * devotio Iberica
 * - mentioned in the etymology of
 * (verb)
 * (Dearly beloved?)
 * (Vulgar Latin) - etymon of English
 * (adjective), whence
 * - etymon of English
 * — see Citations:deurode
 * (Vulgar Latin) - etymon of English
 * (adjective), whence
 * - etymon of English
 * — see Citations:deurode
 * — see Citations:deurode
 * — see Citations:deurode

E

 * (taxonomy)
 * , from, from
 * , post-Classical
 * epididymidis as in ductus epididymidis (anatomy) — blue-linked because of an English misspelling entry
 * equiperdum as in Trypanosoma equiperdum. See Category:Species entry using missing Translingual specific epithet.
 * erithacus species epithet?, from Greek. See Erithacus Genus names are often appropriated as species epithets without capitalization. It is part of the 'grammar' or taxonomic naming.
 * erythematosus as in lupus erythematosus (medical) — blue-linked because of an English entry
 * (I suspect this is est-ne, but I'm moving it here from English requests.)
 * - A suffix, an example of usage is the word terrestrial
 * et saep. /et saep
 * inflected form of, having alternative form ?
 * etunicatum as in Glomus etunicatum See Category:Species entry using missing Translingual specific epithet.
 * - where German "Abitur" comes from
 * (see entry in this old Latin/English dictionary: https://books.google.com/books?id=k1ZFAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA204&dq=exertim&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwinuc669r_cAhWLGXwKHa6EANYQ6AEIODAD#v=onepage&q=exertim&f=false)
 * , whence the English
 * (deponent verb, pluperfect, could be form of verb )
 * inflected form of, having alternative form ?
 * etunicatum as in Glomus etunicatum See Category:Species entry using missing Translingual specific epithet.
 * - where German "Abitur" comes from
 * (see entry in this old Latin/English dictionary: https://books.google.com/books?id=k1ZFAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA204&dq=exertim&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwinuc669r_cAhWLGXwKHa6EANYQ6AEIODAD#v=onepage&q=exertim&f=false)
 * , whence the English
 * (deponent verb, pluperfect, could be form of verb )
 * (deponent verb, pluperfect, could be form of verb )

F

 * - mown (I assume connected with ?). see e.g. The Charters of Duchess Constance of Brittany and Her Family, 1171-1221, page 72 Google Books
 * - taxonomy
 * , New Latin; whence the English.
 * , given as origin of French (Hearth tax)
 * - fodder / lead fother
 * , mentioned in a few entries, such as this one: https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/foraneo. Probably related to "*forānus", which is mentioned here: https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/foreign.
 * - see 🇨🇬
 * , mentioned in a few entries, such as this one: https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/foraneo. Probably related to "*forānus", which is mentioned here: https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/foreign.
 * - see 🇨🇬
 * - see 🇨🇬

G

 * taxonomy (or mul)
 * - taxonomy
 * - "cod" as see Gadus (etymology) — blue-linked because of a Latvian entry
 * (Ecclesiastical Latin)
 * (supposedly etymon of Old Portuguese (moustache))
 * - Vulgar Latin, possibly etymon of
 * (supposedly etymon of Old Portuguese (moustache))
 * - Vulgar Latin, possibly etymon of
 * - Vulgar Latin, possibly etymon of

H

 * - taxonomy
 * taxonomy (or mul)
 * — whence the English
 * — Late and/or Mediaeval Latin. It's supposedly the etymon of the English, but I can't find it in Lewis & Short, Gaffiot, Niermeyer, or the Oxford Latin Dictionary. The Oxford English Dictionary's entry for the English term includes the note "The Greek phrase [sc. ἓν διὰ δυοῖν ‘one by means of two’] is apparently not found in Greek grammarians, but is frequent in Servius on Virgil; in late MSS. of Servius, it appears latinized as , ; Papias (12–13th cent.) has ." (links and scilicet are my additions).  — I.S.M.E.T.A. 06:07, 5 November 2014 (UTC)
 * - Medieval
 * (emphatic form of hic?)
 * + . L&S in the entry hic: "More emphatic, in the original full form, hīce, haece, hōce (not, as formerly written, hicce, haecce, hocce [...]". Some younger dictionaries do have it as hice (not hīce) and don't mention hicce at all, not even as a misspelling. For older Latin, the existence of hice, haece, hoce (or hīce, haece, hōce) might be doubtful and depend on the manuscript or edition (compare Citations:haec, Citations:huic and the comment in the version history). In Medieval and older New Latin, both hice and hicce could have exist.
 * , neologism, used in best-selling Latin translation Hobbitus Ille of The Hobbit by J. R. R. Tolkien
 * , "hiccup", as seen in ety at hocket
 * , from
 * , neologism, used in best-selling Latin translation Hobbitus Ille of The Hobbit by J. R. R. Tolkien
 * , "hiccup", as seen in ety at hocket
 * , from

I
In a Latin text, a translation of Aristophanes' work, though it could be New Latin and another term: "STREPSIADES. Io, io, gnate mi, iu, iu! ut laetor ..."
 * – see English entry
 * - taxonomy
 * , : to infect (whence, and ). Thadh (talk) 10:43, 14 July 2021 (UTC)
 * inter vivos
 * simply inter + vivos, as in English donatio inter vivos?
 * , 'citable' in https://apps.atilf.fr/lecteurFEW/lire/40/771. Anything unattested that appears in a reputable etymological dictionary should be ok for an appendix. IMO. Renard Migrant (talk) 17:21, 3 September 2016 (UTC)
 * - as in
 * ,, , meaning Iraqi (adj.)? Etymology could be: Irac- (stem of Irac (indecl., f.), Iraca (-ae, f.), or maybe also Iracus (?), Iracum (?) meaning Iraq) + -anus''.
 * : Example: "[Arab name], medicus Iracanus, i.e. sine dubio Bagdadensis et interpres meritissimus, qui [...]" in Memoriam anniversariam dedicatae ante hos CCLXXXXVIII annos scholae regiae afranae, p.36, at GB - which could mean something like: '[Arab name], Iraqi physician/doctor, that is without doubt from Baghdad (or: Baghdadi, Baghdadian) and much deserved interpreter (or: explainer, translator)'. Another one, though this might also mean Iraqi (subst.): "Ego vero, inquit Emir, unde te norim, cum ego Damascenus sim, tu sis Iracanus?" in Institutiones Arabicae linguae. Adjecta est chrestomathia Arabica, 1770, p.528.
 * : Could mean Iraqis (subst). Example: "Persae, Iracani, Indi, ut Thomthom [...], et Euclides eius auctores habentur" quoted inside a German text at GB
 * : Example: "[Arab words] significare ventum Iracanum, non improbabile est" at GB - where "ventum Iracanum" could be the accusative of "ventus Iracanus" meaning "Iraqi wind".
 * : Example: "Diwani carmina, ait, in diversa genera divisit, qualia sunt Iracana" in Lexicon bibliographicum et encyclopaedicum. Tomus tertius, 1842, p.259.
 * - needs noun
 * (-arum, m.) or (-ae, m.) (?), and  (-orum, m.) or  (-i, m.), and  (-orum, m.) or  (-i, m.) or  (-a, -um; adj.) - Iroquois?
 * "Singulare autem et atrox fuit apud Canadenses populos illius Iroquae dictum" (Jer. Jac. Oberlinus, ''Caius Cornelius Tacitus [...] Tomus quartus',' Paris, 1824, p. 303)
 * "Americani Missionarii a sedibus Iroquorum daemones feliciter disturbant" (Annales ecclesiastici post cardinalem baronium [...] Tomus tertius'', Paris, 1666, in the index at the end of the book)
 * "In ejusdem rei terimonium Anglo-Americani ab ingenioso satis auctore advocantur. Hi, ait, et colore corporis crinibusque, et faciei lineamentis mirum quantum Aboriginibus telluris jam accesserunt. Carolinae et Georgiae incolas paululum admodum a fulva Iroquorum cute distare refert." (Disputatio inauguralis de generis humani varietate, Edinburgh/Edinburg (in Latin Edinburgum), 1808, p. 73)
 * "Radices Verborum Iroquaeorum / Radical words of the Mohawk language, with their derivatives" (book title, published in New-York in 1862), contains Latin text, English text and French translations of words. (The English title could implay that Iroquaeorum means Mohawk, but the titles aren't literal translation of each other, and as a Latin word for Mohawk could have been missing or uncommon, the author could have decided to use the more general term Iroquaeorum.)
 * "... sund Hurrones, Huttentoti, Iroquaei, Laponii, aliique Africae, Americae, & Locorum polarium incolae." (Summa philosophica ad mentem angelici doctoris [...] Tom. VI., 1788, p. 204)
 * "In pago Ossernenon nationis Iroquaeae in boreali America" (Acta apostolicae sedis, 1943, www.vatican.va/archive/aas/documents/AAS-35-1943-ocr.pdf)
 * "quos barbari Iroquaei", "quod victores Iroquaei", and "idioma Iroquaeum" (in Latin texts, but in google snippets of books with English titles)
 * - an interjection of joy like io. If attestable. It's mentioned in older grammars, but isn't mentioned in younger dictionaries. As there are Latin io (i.e. iō) and Greek ἰώ, ἰού, there could be a Latin iu and may it be in older editions.
 * "quos barbari Iroquaei", "quod victores Iroquaei", and "idioma Iroquaeum" (in Latin texts, but in google snippets of books with English titles)
 * - an interjection of joy like io. If attestable. It's mentioned in older grammars, but isn't mentioned in younger dictionaries. As there are Latin io (i.e. iō) and Greek ἰώ, ἰού, there could be a Latin iu and may it be in older editions.
 * - an interjection of joy like io. If attestable. It's mentioned in older grammars, but isn't mentioned in younger dictionaries. As there are Latin io (i.e. iō) and Greek ἰώ, ἰού, there could be a Latin iu and may it be in older editions.
 * - Old Latin etymon of

J, K

 * = (or should we count it as English?)

L

 * in taxonomy
 * - a bus (λεωφορείο), as in - we have laophoron SemperBlotto 21:40, 22 April 2011 (UTC)
 * - a putative 🇨🇬 variant of, from which several languages derive their terms for lovage.
 * — Whence the genus epithet ; also called (in Latin) [sc. ].
 * lepturus as in Buccochromis lepturus (note is a genus of grass)
 * — Modern Latin; see lithophyta. See also Vermes.
 * — Modern Latin; see lithophyton
 * - from livor post-Classical, fairly widely used as a specific epithet in a three genders.
 * , claimed to be medieval Vulgar Latin, bluelinked because of other languages
 * now claimed to be Old French ("Deus lo vult (Old French)"), though in other wikipedias it's still claimed to be some form of Latin. and  have Old French entries while  has a note about the conjugation.  has it as "Deus lo volt" (without identification of the language). Conrad von Orelli's Old French grammar mentions volt as form of voloir and has examples in which the words volt and vult occur.
 * - post-Classical, used from at least 15th century onward in astronomical, philosophical, and theological texts: seems to mean "portable"?
 * +, which literally would be place-able, put-able, set-able, dispos e -able? From older dictionaries: "Locabilis, e, verpachtbar", "locabilis, e, das zu verpachten ist", "verpachten, locare [...] das zu verpachten ist, locabilis, e". That is loan-able, lend-able. Also in an older one "†Locabilis, e. Adj. das da kan gesetzt oder an einem Ort gebracht werden. item das zu verpachten oder auszustatten ist. Cic." having both meanings.
 * - Source: http://www.woerterbuchnetz.de/cgi-bin/WBNetz/wbgui_py?sigle=DWB&lemid=GH12292
 * - from the etymology of
 * - from the etymology of

M

 * , gen. . Maize, but what's the gender?
 * - taxonomy
 * in taxonomy
 * in taxonomy
 * taxonomy (or mul)
 * - taxonomy
 * — Late Latin; from ; whence the French.
 * or etymon of
 * - from the etymology of German
 * , post-Classical; from ; whence the English.
 * manjuricus, mandjuricus (manjurica, mandjurica) - Manchu
 * as in vis medicatrix naturae
 * melioloides as in Perisporiopsis melioloides See Category:Species entry using missing Translingual specific epithet.
 * mellonella as in Galleria mellonella. See Category:Species entry using missing Translingual specific epithet.
 * ("remember the last/most recent/newest", see novissimus)
 * mesarthrocarpum as in Discosporangium mesarthrocarpum See Category:Species entry using missing Translingual specific epithet.
 * , a specific epithet only, AFAICT
 * Plautus Poenulus 421 uses this diminutive of Milphio (v. Gaffiot: Milphio): ‘… mī Milphidisce, mea commoditās, mea salus’
 * (Gaffiot has it in the plural ministeriāles, "legal officials"). Renard Migrant (talk) 13:44, 10 October 2016 (UTC)
 * , post-Classical; see.
 * — Seems to be very common in proper-noun constructions.
 * -- Citations:mistrum
 * , "Muhammedanae" and "Mohammedanorum" (books.google.de/books?id=Wn4-AAAAcAAJ&pg=PA258), should mean ''Muhammedan"
 * — seems to be two-ended in nom.sg., i.e. "monoptotos, -os, -on" not "monoptotus, -a, -um"
 * — from the Koine Greek ; whence the English.
 * , post-Classical (used in Boëthius's translation of Aristotle); from.
 * — Please include an etymology.
 * — variant form of ; whence the English
 * - mentioned in
 * - mentioned in 🇨🇬
 * -- Citations:mistrum
 * , "Muhammedanae" and "Mohammedanorum" (books.google.de/books?id=Wn4-AAAAcAAJ&pg=PA258), should mean ''Muhammedan"
 * — seems to be two-ended in nom.sg., i.e. "monoptotos, -os, -on" not "monoptotus, -a, -um"
 * — from the Koine Greek ; whence the English.
 * , post-Classical (used in Boëthius's translation of Aristotle); from.
 * — Please include an etymology.
 * — variant form of ; whence the English
 * - mentioned in
 * - mentioned in 🇨🇬
 * - mentioned in
 * - mentioned in 🇨🇬

N

 * / - taxonomy
 * , post-Classical
 * perhaps "willpower" or "energy" according to some googling, no authoritative references yet
 * , Modern Latin shortening of nil nisi bonum
 * / - taxonomy
 * , post-Classical
 * perhaps "willpower" or "energy" according to some googling, no authoritative references yet
 * , Modern Latin shortening of nil nisi bonum
 * , Modern Latin shortening of nil nisi bonum
 * , Modern Latin shortening of nil nisi bonum

O

 * , species name of the lost shark. The author states that it's Latin for extinct.
 * — used in Boethius
 * , post-Classical; from
 * — The prevalence of scannos of on Google Books makes examples difficult to find.
 * opus est — grammatical phrase: it is necessary + dative + infinitive.
 * , n.
 * , atis, n.
 * give. Z.G.A. 12:47, 3 May 2016 (UTC)
 * - Old Latin etymon of
 * - taxonomy
 * - see 🇨🇬
 * , : alternate spellings of
 * give. Z.G.A. 12:47, 3 May 2016 (UTC)
 * - Old Latin etymon of
 * - taxonomy
 * - see 🇨🇬
 * , : alternate spellings of
 * - see 🇨🇬
 * , : alternate spellings of

P

 * - taxonomy
 * - taxonomic
 * in taxonomy
 * - alternate form of (see Ps. 77:2 Vulg)
 * Which Vulgata? The Nova Vulgata at www.vatican.va/archive/bible/nova_vulgata/documents/nova-vulgata_vt_psalmorum_lt.html and the Vulgatae at www.drbo.org/lvb/chapter/21077.htm and lvc.ibibles.net/019Psalms.htm#019-77 have "Aperiam in parabolis os meum" (la:s:Biblia Sacra Vulgata (Stuttgartensia)/Psalmi has "aperiam in parabola os", www.latinvulgate.com/lv/verse.aspx?t=0&b=21&c=77 has "periam in parabula os meum" as well as "ad parabulam" in 48 and "in parabulam" in 68). There might also be durable archived Vulgatae with parabula in it but that should be a misprint or Medieval or British Latin form. has forms with u in it, so it could exist in ML requiring something like.
 * L&S: “pedem or pedes tollere, extollere (ad concubitum),” Martial 10, 81, 4; 11, 71, 8
 * - Balkan Peninsula
 * pentandra species epithet Ceiba pentandra, also pentandrus, pentandrum, all in several taxonomic names.
 * percnurus species epithet, probably +
 * — compare ; whence the English
 * — post-Classical (Erasmus, ante 1536)
 * — feminine of
 * - has Italian, needs Latin
 * classical, in L&S
 * (verb) to ravage
 * - superlative of
 * - has English, needs Latin
 * (verb) to rain, variant of, . 3p imperfect attested in the Satyricon: "Itaque statim urceatim plovebat..." (chapter 44). Impersonal verb? (Most descendants are)
 * Dictionaries only have "urceatim plovebat (vulg. for pluebat), Petr. 44, 18." and for pluō "usu. impers. [= usually impersonal]". IMHO there should be no entry (*) (2nd conj.) or rather (*) (3rd conj. like pluō), but just a note in / and an entry . However, there is an entry Reconstruction:Latin/plovo.
 * to set, to seal
 * – Church Latin (🇨🇬, 🇨🇬)
 * , post-Classical; whence the English
 * - besides
 * : leader of a type of dance?
 * . See
 * - from the etymology of primus
 * . Seen in the letters of Pliny the Younger.
 * pteronissinus - as in Dermatophagoides pteronyssinus. See Category:Species entry using missing Translingual specific epithet.
 * , from in statu pupillari: "Though primarily addressing myself to past schoolmen, it is not without a hope that the general student and scholar, as well as those still in statu pupillari, will find something of use and to interest" ( The Public School Word-Book by John S. Farmer).  Nicole Sharp (talk) 20:57, 26 January 2022 (UTC)
 * This would be an inflected (ablative singular, I think) form of pupillaris.
 * , n., "explosive"?
 * - etymon of 🇨🇬
 * - alt. spelling
 * ,, , - see 🇨🇬
 * , post-Classical; whence the English
 * - besides
 * : leader of a type of dance?
 * . See
 * - from the etymology of primus
 * . Seen in the letters of Pliny the Younger.
 * pteronissinus - as in Dermatophagoides pteronyssinus. See Category:Species entry using missing Translingual specific epithet.
 * , from in statu pupillari: "Though primarily addressing myself to past schoolmen, it is not without a hope that the general student and scholar, as well as those still in statu pupillari, will find something of use and to interest" ( The Public School Word-Book by John S. Farmer).  Nicole Sharp (talk) 20:57, 26 January 2022 (UTC)
 * This would be an inflected (ablative singular, I think) form of pupillaris.
 * , n., "explosive"?
 * - etymon of 🇨🇬
 * - alt. spelling
 * ,, , - see 🇨🇬
 * - etymon of 🇨🇬
 * - alt. spelling
 * ,, , - see 🇨🇬

Q

 * . See quadral, also a species epithet. quadralis
 * c.f. William Petty's Quantulumcunque concerning Money (‘something, be it ever so small, about money’
 * (bluelinked because of Galician)
 * quid pro quo needs adding to the list. As in ' to do something for someone in return for a favour or service they have already done for you'. i.e, 'you scratch my back, and I'll scratch yours'; or in layman's terms, to repay a favour, often in kind, and not in the form of a cash payment, but rather via performing some service, assistance, or favour, to even the debt.
 * Since it literally means "something for something" this would be SoP in Latin, wouldn't it? Furius (talk) 20:11, 15 November 2012 (UTC)
 * quis, quit as derivative forms from the verb . 'Quis' and 'Quit' have pages but the pages do not know the verbal forms of the word and so someone looking up the latin word used in a verbal context will not be able to translate it.
 * qui tacet consentit means silence gives consent in Latin.
 * quod licet Iovi, non licet bovi
 * quod gratis asseritur, gratis negatur: "what is freely asserted can be freely deserted" (?)
 * qui tacet consentit means silence gives consent in Latin.
 * quod licet Iovi, non licet bovi
 * quod gratis asseritur, gratis negatur: "what is freely asserted can be freely deserted" (?)

R

 * (in taxonomy)
 * — whence the English
 * , Latin Latin; whence the English.
 * ≈ "public prosecutor"
 * , … - hindrances
 * (deponent verb)- this has both deponent and active conjugations, but we only cover the active one.
 * res angusta domi
 * res furtiva
 * rhizogenes as in Agrobacterium rhizogenes
 * ridendo castigat mores
 * . Dante. Precursor of ? From, ?
 * (-ae, f.), (-a, -um) (17-19th century Latin, e.g. in De runis helsingicis, 1698) - rune, runic?
 * Reductio Ad Carcerum
 * Reductio Ad Scelestum
 * Reductio Ad Penalum
 * Reductio Ad Iustitium
 * Reductio Ad Lexum
 * Reductio Ad Criminalum
 * Reductio Ad Codexum
 * Reductio Ad Constitutium
 * Reductio Ad Prohibitum
 * Reductio Ad Legalum
 * Reductio Ad Illegalum
 * ,, - see 🇨🇬
 * Reductio Ad Legalum
 * Reductio Ad Illegalum
 * ,, - see 🇨🇬

S

 * (in taxonomy} Salamandroides
 * in taxonomy
 * = sine loco, anno, (vel) nomine ("without place, year or name") according to Merriam-Webster Dict.
 * - taxonomy
 * sacchariflorus, species epithet as in Miscanthus sacchariflorus See Category:Species entry using missing Translingual specific epithet
 * salvere iubeo
 * sciaticus - as in "nervus sciaticus" (anatomy)
 * - chess
 * cp. ?
 * - wicked or similar (Lucretius), no sure about macrons
 * - dance
 * (-a, -on) - Dictionaries sometimes mention unattested forms, but this time the feminine is attested in Pliny's work. Attic Greek is (-ή, -όν), so an explanation for the change from  to a is missing. Did he Latinise the feminine so that it is almost like schistos (-ē, -on) and schistus (-a, -um) with many forms being unattested, or does his form come from another Greek dialect (compare Appendix:Ancient Greek dialectal declension)?
 * with plural selā from - considering the declension it could be one-of-a-kind word
 * The references given by dictionaries might just be mentionings:
 * Apul., de mundo: "Selas autem Graeci vocant incensi aeris lucem; horum pleraque iaculari credas (alia labi), stare alia."
 * Sen., quaestiones naturales: "Fulgores, inquis, quomodo fiunt, quos Graeci sela/Sela appellant?"
 * - seems to be +, but don't both mean himself/itself... itself itself? is it an intensive, like its very own self?
 * Georges states "semet ipsum, ipso, ipsos, ipsas, oft in der Vulg." where "Vulg." should abbreviate Vulgata, so it would mean "often in the Vulgate (Latin Bible)". Maybe the usage can be explained by the Greek text?
 * - needs noun
 * , -a, -um: A latin adjective meaning "sibylline". See https://www.latin-is-simple.com/en/vocabulary/adjective/7802/
 * sice, seic - Altenative versions of sic
 * - siem & sies are alternatives to sim & sis (Cato Agr.141)
 * sisalana - species epithet "Agave sisalana"
 * - (also, soloecismus); noun; masculine; second declension; mistake in grammar, solecism; WORDS definiton
 * ― etymon of Italian, whence diminutive , whence the plural , whence English, French, and Polish
 * — from the Ancient Greek ; whence the English
 * : see "sto" on latin dictionary. Sentence: "Locus standi" (Place of standing).
 * ( In that example it should be the gerundium (not the gerundivum or participle future passive) which would be missing on . )
 * (see google books) DTLHS (talk) 18:45, 17 October 2015 (UTC)
 * status spongiosus: some kind of medical symptom; might be more English than Latin in usage
 * (accusative singular form of assumed ) — Old Latin etymon on the Classical Latin
 * — from the Ancient Greek ; whence the homographic English
 * — plural of strophiarius, related to strophium. Appears in Plautus' Aulularia, line 516.
 * - stylobate
 * — "very ancient orthog." (see L&S) for
 * – to add up
 * - "carry over", from English etymology.
 * - “extravagant, of hyperbole”, from English etymology.
 * — from ; whence the English
 * (Gaffiot has it to mean symptom oddly enough). Renard Migrant (talk) 23:13, 4 February 2016 (UTC)
 * - see 🇨🇬
 * (Medieval Latin; modern city of Soure), mentioned in a royal donation from 1128 (see here).
 * — from the Ancient Greek ; whence the homographic English
 * — plural of strophiarius, related to strophium. Appears in Plautus' Aulularia, line 516.
 * - stylobate
 * — "very ancient orthog." (see L&S) for
 * – to add up
 * - "carry over", from English etymology.
 * - “extravagant, of hyperbole”, from English etymology.
 * — from ; whence the English
 * (Gaffiot has it to mean symptom oddly enough). Renard Migrant (talk) 23:13, 4 February 2016 (UTC)
 * - see 🇨🇬
 * (Medieval Latin; modern city of Soure), mentioned in a royal donation from 1128 (see here).
 * (Medieval Latin; modern city of Soure), mentioned in a royal donation from 1128 (see here).

T

 * - taxonomy
 * , (impersonal verb). L&S: "taedeo, ēre, v. taedet, II." and "taedet, dŭit or sum est, 2, [...] In late Lat., sometimes as a personal verb". That means: 1. In Classical Latin taedere/taedet was an impersonal verb. 2. The verb can also be semi-deponent (taedere, taedet, taesum est). Maybe same is true for the personal verb ?
 * — Ungoliant (falai) 15:50, 15 December 2015 (UTC)
 * telarium tiller of a ship
 * — See.
 * — From the Ancient Greek ; whence the English and the French.
 * - in the etymology of English
 * be evasive
 * - three-part - used in Orosius Historiae Adversus Paganos Book 1 Chapter 2 and in Jordanes Getica I
 * - trolls? Cited in an English text: "Item in regione ista sunt trolli sive cacodemones servientes hominibus, et sunt spiritus"
 * - see 🇨🇬
 * be evasive
 * - three-part - used in Orosius Historiae Adversus Paganos Book 1 Chapter 2 and in Jordanes Getica I
 * - trolls? Cited in an English text: "Item in regione ista sunt trolli sive cacodemones servientes hominibus, et sunt spiritus"
 * - see 🇨🇬
 * - see 🇨🇬
 * - see 🇨🇬
 * - see 🇨🇬

V

 * - taxonomy
 * (needs Latin) —  vices agens , seems to have formerly been used in English but now obsolete
 * , Mediaeval Latin
 * : a little bracelet
 * - from the etymology of
 * - it's blue, but missing an entry matching the etymology of ?
 * : a little bracelet
 * - from the etymology of
 * - it's blue, but missing an entry matching the etymology of ?
 * - from the etymology of
 * - it's blue, but missing an entry matching the etymology of ?
 * - from the etymology of
 * - it's blue, but missing an entry matching the etymology of ?

X, Y, Z

 * (in taxonomy)
 * (Marcus Vitruvius Pollio, De architectura, Liber IV) e.g. Wikisource and google - plural of (or ), where oe transcribes Greek οι (oi)

de:Wiktionary:Latein/Wunschliste