Latin Americanist in Vietnamese
danh từ
nhà nghiên cứu về Mỹ La-tinh
Sentence patterns related to "Latin Americanist"
1. Americanised; Americanish; Americanisms; Americanist; americanista; American Italian
2. This is the Americanist idea of the origins of syphilis.
3. Antecedens (Latin) antecedere (Latin) 4
4. Beneficialis (Latin) beneficium (Latin) 3
5. From mediaeval Latin Complacentia, from Latin complaceō (“please”).
6. [From New Latin Branchiopoda, class name : Latin branchia, gills; see branchia + New Latin -poda, -pod.]
7. Medieval Latin Connaturalis, from Latin com-+ naturalis natural
8. From mediaeval Latin Complacentia, from Latin complaceo (“please").
9. (noun) Italian short for claviCembalo from Medieval Latin clāvicymbalum Latin clāvis key Latin cymbalum cymbal cymbal
10. Adenota Adenota vardoni adept Aden in Latin English-Latin dictionary
11. Latin 'alumen '
12. From Latin Armamentarium (arsenal), eventually from Latin armare (to arm)
13. Later Latin authors adapted the word to Latin as stibium.
Muộn hơn, các tác giả Latinh đã làm thích ứng từ này bằng từ Latinh dưới dạng stibium.
14. From mediaeval Latin Complacentia, from Latin complaceo ("please")
15. Borrowed from French Communal, from Late Latin commūnālis, from Latin commūnis
16. 1817 Courtroom Latin Medieval Latin Arguendum (“to argue”) What is Arguendo
17. Alcali n (indeclinable) (chemistry, Medieval Latin, New Latin) alkali; Related terms
18. Jordanes wrote in Late Latin rather than the classical Ciceronian Latin.
Toàn bộ tác phẩm đều được Jordanes viết bằng tiếng Latinh Hậu kỳ chứ không phải thứ tiếng Latinh cổ điển theo kiểu Cicero.
19. How is Aetatis (Latin: Aged) abbreviated? AETAT stands for Aetatis (Latin: Aged)
20. From post-classical Latin alembication-, alembicatio from alembicus, Alembicum + classical Latin -ātiō.
21. Afro-Latin Americans
22. Contemptible, adjective [Latin]
23. Mid 17th century from medieval Latin Complacentia, from Latin complacere ‘to please’.
24. Mid 17th century from medieval Latin Complacentia, from Latin complacere ‘to please’.
25. Latin: ·(Late Latin) (intransitive) I speak in allegories, allegorise or Allegorize