See also: excetera <span class="searchmatch">ex</span> <span class="searchmatch">cetera</span> Misspelling of et <span class="searchmatch">cetera</span>. execrate, excreate...
See also: <span class="searchmatch">ex</span> <span class="searchmatch">cetera</span> excetera Pronunciation spelling of et <span class="searchmatch">cetera</span>. excreate, execrate...
cum-<span class="searchmatch">ex</span> dea <span class="searchmatch">ex</span> machina deus <span class="searchmatch">ex</span> machina <span class="searchmatch">ex</span> abundante cautela <span class="searchmatch">ex</span> ante <span class="searchmatch">ex</span>-ante <span class="searchmatch">ex</span> cathedra <span class="searchmatch">ex</span> <span class="searchmatch">cetera</span> <span class="searchmatch">ex</span> contractu <span class="searchmatch">ex</span> copula <span class="searchmatch">ex</span> delicto <span class="searchmatch">ex</span> dividend <span class="searchmatch">ex</span> facie...
Dictionary, Springfield, Mass.: G. & C. Merriam, 1913, →OCLC. execrate, excetera, <span class="searchmatch">ex</span> <span class="searchmatch">cetera</span> excreāte second-person plural present active imperative of excreō...
(2001–2025) “execrate”, in Online Etymology Dictionary. excreate, excetera, <span class="searchmatch">ex</span> <span class="searchmatch">cetera</span> execrāte vocative masculine singular of execrātus execrate second-person...
Latīnum est, per T scrībendum est. Sīc "mīlitia" "malitia" "nēquitia" et <span class="searchmatch">cētera</span> similia. (please add an English translation of this quotation) Second-declension...
Synonyms: īnsignis, excellēns, distīnctus, cōnspicuus, praecipuus, eximius ad <span class="searchmatch">cētera</span> ēgregius ― outstanding from every aspect Auli Gellii noctes atticae cum...
sweetly c. 177 CE, Aulus Gellius, Noctes Atticae 19.7: <span class="searchmatch">Cetera</span> enim, quae videbantur nimium poetica, <span class="searchmatch">ex</span> prosae orationis usu alieniora praetermisimus; veluti...
prostrated, prostrate c. 330 CE, Juvencus, Evangeliorum libri quattuor 1.13: <span class="searchmatch">Cetera</span> nam foribus tunc plebs adstrata rogabat For the rest of the people were...
Wikipedia has an article on: et <span class="searchmatch">cetera</span> Wikipedia &c A use of the ligature & to stand for the et in etc. Compare & <span class="searchmatch">cetera</span>. &c. (archaic) Alternative form...