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Latin terms categorized by their etymologies.
- Category:Latin back-formations: Latin terms formed by reversing a supposed regular formation, removing part of an older term.
- Category:Latin blends: Latin terms formed by combinations of other words.
- Category:Latin borrowed terms: Latin terms that are loanwords, i.e. terms that were directly incorporated from another language.
- Category:Latin calques: Latin calques, i.e. terms formed by piece-by-piece translations of terms from other languages.
- Category:Latin terms by circumfix: Latin terms categorized by their circumfixes.
- Category:Latin compound terms: Latin terms composed of two or more stems.
- Category:Latin coordinated pairs: Terms in Latin consisting of a pair of terms joined by a coordinating conjunction.
- Category:Latin deverbals: Latin terms derived from a verb.
- Category:Latin doublets: Latin terms that trace their etymology from ultimately the same source as other terms in the same language, but by different routes, and often with subtly or substantially different meanings.
- Category:Latin ellipses: Latin terms that are shortened versions of longer expressions.
- Category:Latin eponyms: Latin terms derived from names of real or fictitious people.
- Category:Latin ghost words: Latin terms that were originally erroneous or fictitious, published in a reference work as if they were genuine as a result of typographical error, misreading, or misinterpretation, or as fictitious entries, jokes, or hoaxes.
- Category:Latin haplological words: Latin words that underwent haplology: thus, their origin involved a loss or omission of a repeated sequence of sounds.
- Category:Latin terms by infix: Latin terms categorized by their infixes.
- Category:Latin inherited terms: Latin terms that were inherited from an earlier stage of the language.
- Category:Latin terms by interfix: Latin terms categorized by their interfixes.
- Category:Latin words derived through metathesis: Latin words that were created through metathesis from another word.
- Category:Latin metonyms: Latin terms whose origin involves calling a thing or concept not by its own name, but by the name of something intimately associated with that thing or concept.
- Category:Latin neologisms: Latin terms that have been only recently acknowledged.
- Category:Latin nonce terms: Latin terms that have been invented for a single occasion.
- Category:Latin onomatopoeias: Latin terms that were coined to sound like what they represent.
- Category:Latin partial calques: Latin partial calques, i.e. terms formed partly by piece-by-piece translations of terms from other languages and partly by direct borrowing.
- Category:Latin terms by prefix: Latin terms categorized by their prefixes.
- Category:Latin rebracketings: Latin terms that have interacted with another word in such a way that the boundary between the words has been modified.
- Category:Latin reconstructed terms: Latin terms that are not directly attested, but have been reconstructed through other evidence.
- Category:Latin reduplications: Latin terms that underwent reduplication, so their origin involved a repetition of roots or stems.
- Category:Latin semantic loans: Latin semantic loans, i.e. terms one or more of whose definitions was borrowed from a term in another language.
- Category:Latin sound-symbolic terms: Latin terms that use sound symbolism to express ideas but which are not necessarily strictly speaking onomatopoeic.
- Category:Latin terms by suffix: Latin terms categorized by their suffixes.
- Category:Latin syncopic forms: Latin words that underwent syncope, thus their origin involved a loss or omission of a sound or syllable from their interior.
- Category:Latin terms attributed to a specific source: Latin terms coined by an identifiable person or deriving from a known work.
- Category:Latin terms derived from other languages: Latin terms that originate from other languages.
- Category:Latin terms derived from toponyms: Latin terms derived from names of real or fictitious places.
- Category:Latin univerbations: Latin terms that result from the agglutination of two or more words.
- Category:Latin terms with unknown etymologies: Latin terms whose etymologies have not yet been established.