Clues for the word "LATIN"
We've had 228 crossword clues used for this word, and seen it 452 times in crosswords. It was last seen in Evening Standard Cryptic crossword on December 02, 2025.
Definition of latin
- a. - Of or pertaining to Latium, or to the Latins, a people of Latium; Roman; as, the Latin language.
- a. - Of, pertaining to, or composed in, the language used by the Romans or Latins; as, a Latin grammar; a Latin composition or idiom.
- n. - A native or inhabitant of Latium; a Roman.
- n. - The language of the ancient Romans.
- n. - An exercise in schools, consisting in turning English into Latin.
- n. - A member of the Roman Catholic Church.
- v. t. - To write or speak in Latin; to turn or render into Latin.
Referring Clues
- What Mr. Chips taught
- Language for the masses
- Kind of quarter
- "E pluribus unum," e.g.
- Forum language
- Mr. Chips's class in "Goodbye, Mr. Chips"
- Like many inscriptions
- Pig ___
- Like 50-Across and 10-Down
- See 41-Across
- Like "E pluribus unum"
- It can be vulgar
- "Ad hominem" source
- Mass communication medium?
- Mass communication?
- 7-Down is in it
- With 71-Across, sort of person who might enjoy this puzzle?
- Exempli gratia, e.g.
- Like most South Americans
- "Dead" language
- Root of all Romance languages
- Pig language?
- One-time language of the Masses?
- Whence many loanwords
- Livy's language
- Mass confusion?
- Language that may be vulgar
- Vatican City's official language
- Status quo language?
- Classic subject
- Taxonomy language
- A quarter of Paris
- Mass language
- Classic language, and with 61-Across, hint to the puzzle theme found at the starts of 20-, 37- and 57-Across
- Romance languages ancestor
- "Aeneid" language
- 1-Across topic
- Tongue of Tiberius
- Like 35-Across
- Pig ___
- Language of many courtroom phrases
- Quorum's origin
- Language of ancient Rome
- Like salsa music
- What Caesar spoke
- . . . in this language
- Cato's tongue
- Language for the masses?
- Virgil's tongue
- The talk of the Forum?
- Word with "America" or "lover"
- Vulgate's language
- Tiberius' tongue
- Language of Lucretius
- Language of the masses, once
- ___ America
- Language of science
- "E pluribus unum", e.g.
- Caesar's language
- What Forum addresses were in
- Ecclesiatical language
- Legal language
- Source of much of English
- Homo sapiens, e.g.
- What Seneca spoke
- ... in this language
- What Cicero spoke
- Roman language
- Caesar's tongue
- Ceasar's tongue
- Like many mottoes
- Hogwarts motto language
- Caesar spoke it
- 43-Across, for example
- Forum talk
- Classic language
- Classical language
- Classic tongue
- Classical tongue
- Classics language
- Forum tongue
- Old tongue
- Terence's tongue
- Livy's tongue
- Nero's language
- "Ad hoc," e.g.
- "Little ____ Lupe Lu"
- "Little ____ Lupe Lu"
- With 42-Across, one who might memorize 64-Across?
- Julius Caesar's language
- Source of much legalese
- Like about half of American states' mottos
- Word after pig or before quarter
- Forum speech
- Catholic Church language
- One-time mass communication medium?
- See 27-Down
- The Vatican's language
- Like the samba and salsa
- Language of many a motto
- Like many abbreviated terms in footnotes
- Forum talk was in it
- Speech, in the forum
- "Dies Irae" language
- Many mottoes are written in it
- Nero's native tongue
- Vulgar language?
- Language of 14-Across
- Many prayers are said in it
- Like ego and ergo
- Old Roman language
- Source of many legal terms
- Holy See official language
- "Amo, amas, amat," e.g.
- Vatican City language
- Part of a classical education
- 19-Across's language
- Caeser's tongue
- Like salsa
- Cicero's language
- Language of many mottos
- Caesar's native tongue
- What Bryn Mawr grads once had to know
- "Et tu, Brute?" or "Veni, vidi, vici"
- Like many state mottos
- Language of old Rome
- Ipso facto, e.g.
- Adeste fideles, e.g.
- Ancient language
- "Quid pro quo," e.g.
- Kind of Grammy awards
- Helloween "Laudate Dominum" language
- Iced Earth "In Sacred Flames" language
- Language
- Platinum tongue-piercing
- Chunk of congenitally revolting tongue
- Cicero's tongue
- Felix is happy in it
- In which the Romans had been lying about starting trouble
- People no longer speak it, but Upman can
- Figure the anti-revolutionary is not English
- Returning with a woman: fifty, olive-skinned and brown-eyed?
- Roman
- Tongue at a pound a can
- Old language
- Language used in slating old people
- Language giving joy, without going to extremes
- The language of the City - money
- It's heads on American quarter and tails on thieves' dog
- Some modern Italian? On the contrary
- Admit one's ousted English language
- Language involved in formulating a dodgy dossier
- It's spoken retrospectively by some in Italy?
- Some say it's dead and buried - about time!
- Requiem language, often
- Language for legal terminology
- Part of 14 take some translating
- Language lately starts to be fashionable
- The French can make up a language
- What was heard in Rome and a quarter of Paris
- The tongue can be somewhat titillating
- Note element required for language
- Endlessly criticising
- Extraction of oscillating tongue
- Words once spoken - about time rested
- The south-east corner is in the 5th and 6th arrondissements
- "E pluribus unum" language
- Old school subject
- Was it spoken in pieces of broken Italian?
- Cicero wrote in it
- Traditional school subject
- Ab absurdo language
- What was heard in Rome and a quarter of Paris?
- Language on all current U.S. coins
- What Julius Caesar spoke
- Could it describe a quarter of tongue?
- What Rowling learned at Exeter
- School subject
- What most college mottoes are in
- Language that comes in for some slating
- Language learned by seminarians
- "Carpe diem" language
- Language of 15-Across 4-Down
- The French can get this old language
- Such scholars have their maters and paters
- A foreigner found in the Atlantic, swimming
- Much of legalese
- "Et cetera" language
- Music store category
- Language for the Masses?
- A language and a quarter?
- Language of many state mottos
- Like the alphabet in Vatican City ... or each letter in the starred answers
- Foreign language seen on U.S. money
- Tongue in gelatine
- Roman said to be dead
- Pig ___ (pseudo-language)
- Virgil's language
- Horace’s poetry is written in it
- Language of the Roman Empire
- Pig ___ (silly language)
- Mass medium
- Like "aurum" for gold and "ferrum" for iron
- Like "alter ego" and "alma mater"
- Romance language's root
- "Tabula rasa" language
- Vatican language
- Language that gave us "e.g."
- In which "Stella" means "star"
- Language that gave us "i.e."
- Language that gave us "ad hoc"
- Form of communication used in Roman times
- Returning with a woman: fifty, olive-skinned and brown-eyed?
- "Cogito, ergo sum" language
- "Lux et veritas" language
- "Veni, vidi, vici" language
- "Per se" and "quid pro quo" language
- "In varietate concordia" language
- ___ trap (Bad Bunny genre)
- "Carpe diem" and "status quo" language
- Italian ancestor found in the Atlantic, swimming
- Ancestor of the romance languages
- Like bossa nova or salsa
- "Bona fide" language
- Language of much legalese
- Like many legal terms
- Source of many a motto
- Left a can of tongue
Last Seen In
- Evening Standard Cryptic - December 02, 2025
- Evening Standard Cryptic - November 19, 2025
- Mirror Daily - November 09, 2025
- Your Life Choices - October 24, 2025
- Evening Standard Easy - October 14, 2025
- Daily Quick - October 11, 2025
- Mindfood Daily - October 08, 2025
- Evening Standard Easy - October 02, 2025
- Daily American - September 17, 2025
- Daily American - August 10, 2025
- Evening Standard Quick - July 21, 2025
- Daily American - July 15, 2025
- New York Times - July 04, 2025
- Mirror Daily - June 22, 2025
- Evening Standard Easy - June 18, 2025
- Mirror Daily - June 08, 2025
- Daily Quick - June 07, 2025
- Evening Standard Cryptic - June 05, 2025
- Mirror Daily - May 30, 2025
- Daily American - May 28, 2025
- Mirror Mini - May 25, 2025
- Evening Standard Easy - May 19, 2025
- Evening Standard Easy - May 08, 2025
- LA Times - April 25, 2025
- Mirror Daily - April 09, 2025
- Mirror Daily - April 07, 2025
- Evening Standard Easy - April 02, 2025
- Mirror Daily - March 29, 2025
- Mirror Daily - March 19, 2025
- Mirror Daily - March 15, 2025
- And in 422 more crossword puzzles...