One might purchase a Latin to English dictionary online at book stores or retailers that sell a wide variety of products, like Amazon. One can purchase this dictionary in a digital form, or order a physical copy.
Someone looking to buy a Cambridge dictionary online could find them fairly cheap at either Amazon or even eBay. They could also order it through the Cambridge website.
last time i had to translate from English to latin i used an online dictionary like this one... http://www.freedict.com/onldict/lat.HTML however, you have to enter each word by itself and there are multiple meanings for each word. so i also went online and searched for latin professors at a handful of universities and emailed them to get their translation.
To publish a book is 'edere'; to make public is 'efferre' or 'proferre'; to lay open or reveal is 'patefacere'; to make generally known or to circulate is 'divulgare'. See Smith's Copious and Critical English-Latin Dictionary.
The verb est in Latin is "is" in English.
pumilio, pumilionis (m/f, usually masculine) You can use Perseus (at Tufts) for free online. Look for the "English to ____ (Language)," select Latin or Greek, and it will look up the word in Latin/Greek for you.
"With the sailors!" in English is Cum nautis! in Latin.
One can purchase English to Latin translation dictionaries online at Amazon and eBay or in stores such as Barnes & Noble, Books-A-Million, and Walmart.
English translations can be found online or in a Latin to English dictionary. An online website that helps with translations is Google Translate. Webster's dictionary is also a helpful translating tool.
There are a wide range of sites that offer language translation but few options for a Latin to English dictionary. There is a free Latin to English dictionary available on the 'freedict' website. The AbleMedia website also offers a free dictionary for Latin to English.
I could not find it in an online Latin-English dictionary, but I'm wondering if it is the Latin word for the element Lithium?
Fritter comes from the Latin word "fractura." For any other similar questions you could refer to the Online Etymology Dictionary: http://www.etymonline.com or the Oxford English Dictionary, which is also online: http://www.oed.com
D.P Simpson has written: 'Cassell's new Latin-English English-Latin dictionary' 'First principles of Latin prose'
Vita is the Latin root for "life". An English to Latin dictionary would be helpful.
The word football does not come from Latin. It is from the English language, and is a compound of foot and ball based on the Oxford English Dictionary.
iris is the latin word for "rainbow" hence the English word "iridescent"
I'm not so sure. Maybe you should look in a English to Latin dictionary It will be in there
The German website Spoken Sanskrit provides a good quality dictionary service. The translation is from Sanskrit character into Latin characters that preserve pronunciation and also gives an English translation.
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