crivu Spanish: cribo “<span class="searchmatch">cribrum</span>”, in Charlton T. Lewis and Charles Short (1879) A Latin Dictionary, Oxford: Clarendon Press “<span class="searchmatch">cribrum</span>”, in Charlton T. Lewis...
cribri m plural of cribro crībrī genitive singular of <span class="searchmatch">crībrum</span>...
See also: Ciur Inherited from Vulgar Latin *cibrum, from Latin <span class="searchmatch">crībrum</span> (through dissimilation). Compare Aromanian tsir; compare also the different dissimilation...
tsiru From Vulgar Latin *cibrum, from Latin <span class="searchmatch">cribrum</span>. Compare Romanian ciur. tsir n (plural tsiri or tsire or tsiruri) sieve, screen sitã dirmonj ntsernu...
Borrowed from Latin <span class="searchmatch">cribrum</span>, from Proto-Indo-European *krey- (“to sieve”). Compare the inherited old Italian crivo, and related crivello. IPA(key): /ˈkri...
cribellum Wikipedia Borrowed from Late Latin cribellum, diminutive of Latin <span class="searchmatch">cribrum</span> (“sieve”). IPA(key): /kɹɪˈbɛləm/ cribellum (plural cribella) (zoology)...
<span class="searchmatch">crībrum</span> (“sieve”) + -ōsus (Classical Latin) IPA(key): [kriːˈbroː.sʊs] (modern Italianate Ecclesiastical) IPA(key): [kriˈbrɔː.s̬us] crībrōsus (feminine...
From crivello + -are, from Late Latin cribellum, diminutive of Latin <span class="searchmatch">cribrum</span>. Cf. also Late Latin cribellāre (“pass through a sieve; sift”). IPA(key):...