glossa

Etymology
From the. .

Noun

 * 1)  The, or , especially of an.
 * 2)  Unintelligible ecstatic speech.
 * 1)  Unintelligible ecstatic speech.
 * 1)  Unintelligible ecstatic speech.
 * 1)  Unintelligible ecstatic speech.
 * 1)  Unintelligible ecstatic speech.

Translations

 * Bulgarian:

Etymology 1
.

Noun

 * 1) gloss explanatory note
 * 2) comment, annotation

Etymology 1
..

Noun

 * 1) gloss (explanatory note)

Etymology
From.

Noun

 * 1) tongue

Etymology
Borrowed from.

Noun

 * 1) an obsolete, foreign, rare, or otherwise difficult term that requires explanation
 * 2) * circa AD 95''', Marcus Fabius Quintilianus (author), Harold Edgeworth Butler (editor, translator), ' (1920), book I, chapter i, § 35:
 * protinus enim potest interpretationem linguae secretioris, quas Graeci γλώσσας vocant, dum aliud agitur, ediscere et inter prima elementa consequi rem postea proprium tempus desideraturam. et quoniam circa res adhuc tenues moramur, ii quoque versus, qui ad imitationem scribendi proponentur, non otiosas velim sententias habeant sed honestum aliquid monentes.
 * He can readily learn the explanations or glosses, as the Greeks call them, of the more obscure words by the way and, while he is still engaged on the first rudiments, acquire what would otherwise demand special time to be devoted to it. And as we are still discussing minor details, I would urge that the lines, which he is set to copy, should not express thoughts of no significance, but convey some sound moral lesson. ― translation from the same source
 * 1)  an explanation or interpretation of such a word
 * 2)  an explanation added to a passage of text, a gloss
 * 3)   collections of such words with explanations, a glossary
 * 4)  a series of glosses assembled into a commentary
 * 5)  a language, dialect, or peculiar idiom
 * 6)  an image or example (of a thing)
 * 1)   collections of such words with explanations, a glossary
 * 2)  a series of glosses assembled into a commentary
 * 3)  a language, dialect, or peculiar idiom
 * 4)  an image or example (of a thing)
 * 1)  a language, dialect, or peculiar idiom
 * 2)  an image or example (of a thing)
 * 1)  an image or example (of a thing)

Usage notes
Some classical sources used the untranslated and untransliterated Greek in their running text rather than the Latinized form. Unlike English, the titles of works glossing other texts generally takes prepositional phrases (Glosae super Macrobium, Glossae in Iuvenalium, etc.) rather than the genitive.