View example sentences and word forms for Latinized.

Latinized

Latinized meaning

simple past and past participle of latinize

Example sentences (15)

All but Edward III and both Elizabeths use Latinized names (which would have been EDWARDUS and ELIZABETHAE respectively).

As customary in those days for humanists, he Latinized his name, to Conradus Celtis.

As in English, there are many pairs of synonyms due to the enrichment of the Germanic vocabulary with loanwords from Latin and Latinized Greek.

As Uniate religious practices had become more Latinized, Orthodoxy in this region drew even closer into dependence on the Russian Orthodox Church.

Based on its phonetic value in Modern Greek, gamma has also been introduced in a number of modern Latin-alphabet based phonetic notations ( Latin (or latinized) gamma Ɣ).

Cartographers still use a Latinized version of his first name, America, for the two continents.

Confucius 's works were translated into European languages through the agency of Jesuit scholars stationed in China, which is why Kǒng Fūzǐ is known in the West under his Latinized name to this day.

He normally signed documents as Raphael Urbinas — a latinized form.

In Sparta itself, the temple of Athena Khalkíoikos (Athena "of the Brazen House", often latinized as Chalcioecus) was the grandest and located on the Spartan acropolis; presumably it had a roof of bronze.

In the Koine Greek of Roman times, crocodilos and crocodeilos would have been pronounced identically, and either or both may be the source of the Latinized form crocodīlus used by the ancient Romans.

Latinized forms of Ancient Greek roots are used in many of the scientific names of species and in other scientific terminology.

Nicolaus Steno (Latinized name of Niels Steensen) with John Garrett Winter, trans., The Prodromus of Nicolaus Steno's Dissertation Concerning a Solid Body Enclosed by Process of Nature Within a Solid (New York, New York: Macmillan Co., 1916).

Oscan and Umbrian forms tend to be found in inscriptions; in Roman literature these names are often Latinized.

The genus name combines a reference to the Junggar Basin with a Latinized Greek pteron, "wing".

The word "demiurge" is an English word from demiurgus, a Latinized form of the Greek δημιουργός main, dēmiourgos which was originally a common noun meaning "craftsman" or "artisan", but gradually it came to mean "producer" and eventually "creator".