English search results for: offspring
#1
noun
- declension: 4th declension
- gender: masculine
Definitions:
- brood/litter
- children (of a parent)
- offspring/young (animals)
-
Age:
In use throughout the ages/unknown
-
Area:
All or none
-
Geography:
All or none
-
Frequency:
Very frequent, in all Elementry Latin books, top 1000+ words
-
Source:
“Oxford Latin Dictionary”, 1982 (OLD)
#2
noun
- declension: 4th declension
- gender: masculine
Definitions:
- brood/litter
- children (of a parent)
- offspring/young (animals)
-
Age:
In use throughout the ages/unknown
-
Area:
All or none
-
Geography:
All or none
-
Frequency:
Very frequent, in all Elementry Latin books, top 1000+ words
-
Source:
“Oxford Latin Dictionary”, 1982 (OLD)
#3
noun
- declension: 3rd declension
- gender: feminine
Definitions:
- generation
- offspring, descendant
- race, breed
- that springs by birth/descent
-
Age:
In use throughout the ages/unknown
-
Area:
All or none
-
Geography:
All or none
-
Frequency:
Frequent, top 2000+ words
-
Source:
“Oxford Latin Dictionary”, 1982 (OLD)
#4
noun
- declension: 3rd declension
- gender: feminine
Definitions:
- offspring
- progeny
- race
- shoot, sucker
-
Age:
In use throughout the ages/unknown
-
Area:
All or none
-
Geography:
All or none
-
Frequency:
Frequent, top 2000+ words
-
Source:
General, unknown or too common to say
#5
noun
- declension: 3rd declension
- gender: neuter
Definitions:
- entrails, flesh
- offspring
- soft fleshy body parts (usu. pl.), internal organs
-
Age:
In use throughout the ages/unknown
-
Area:
Biological, Medical, Body Parts
-
Geography:
All or none
-
Frequency:
Frequent, top 2000+ words
-
Source:
General, unknown or too common to say
#6
adjective
Definitions:
- abundant
- fertile, fruitful
- imaginative
- productive (of offspring), prolific
-
Age:
In use throughout the ages/unknown
-
Area:
All or none
-
Geography:
All or none
-
Frequency:
Frequent, top 2000+ words
-
Source:
“Oxford Latin Dictionary”, 1982 (OLD)
#7
noun
- declension: 3rd declension
- gender: neuter
Definitions:
- animal, living thing/offspring
- creature, beast, brute
- insect
-
Age:
In use throughout the ages/unknown
-
Area:
All or none
-
Geography:
All or none
-
Frequency:
Frequent, top 2000+ words
-
Source:
“Oxford Latin Dictionary”, 1982 (OLD)
#8
verb
- conjugation: 4th conjugation
- voice: transitive
Definitions:
- nurture, rear (offspring)
-
Age:
In use throughout the ages/unknown
-
Area:
All or none
-
Geography:
All or none
-
Frequency:
For Dictionary, in top 10,000 words
-
Source:
“Oxford Latin Dictionary”, 1982 (OLD)
#9
noun
- declension: 2nd declension
- gender: masculine
Definitions:
- adulterer
- illicit lover, paramour
- offspring of unlawful love, bastard (eccl.)
-
Age:
In use throughout the ages/unknown
-
Area:
All or none
-
Geography:
All or none
-
Frequency:
For Dictionary, in top 10,000 words
-
Source:
“Oxford Latin Dictionary”, 1982 (OLD)
#10
noun
- declension: 1st declension
- gender: feminine
Definitions:
- brood, litter, young offspring
- laying/hatching eggs
- young shoots (of vine)
-
Age:
In use throughout the ages/unknown
-
Area:
All or none
-
Geography:
All or none
-
Frequency:
For Dictionary, in top 10,000 words
-
Source:
Lewis & Short, “A Latin Dictionary”, 1879 (Lewis & Short)
#11
noun
- declension: 1st declension
- gender: feminine
Definitions:
- brood, litter, young offspring
- laying/hatching eggs
- young shoots (of vine)
-
Age:
In use throughout the ages/unknown
-
Area:
All or none
-
Geography:
All or none
-
Frequency:
For Dictionary, in top 10,000 words
-
Source:
“Oxford Latin Dictionary”, 1982 (OLD)
#12
noun
- declension: 3rd declension
- gender: feminine
Definitions:
- offspring
- progeny
- race
- shoot, sucker
-
Age:
Medieval (11th-15th centuries)
-
Area:
All or none
-
Geography:
All or none
-
Frequency:
For Dictionary, in top 20,000 words
-
Source:
General, unknown or too common to say
#13
noun
- declension: 4th declension
- gender: masculine
Definitions:
- birth
- offspring
-
Age:
In use throughout the ages/unknown
-
Area:
All or none
-
Geography:
All or none
-
Frequency:
For Dictionary, in top 20,000 words
-
Source:
General, unknown or too common to say
#14
noun
- declension: 3rd declension
- gender: neuter
Definitions:
- birth/descent/origin
- offspring/descent
- race/family/house/stock/ancestry
-
Age:
In use throughout the ages/unknown
-
Area:
All or none
-
Geography:
All or none
-
Frequency:
For Dictionary, in top 20,000 words
-
Source:
General, unknown or too common to say
#15
noun
- declension: 3rd declension
- gender: feminine
Definitions:
- layer or set by which a plant is propagated
- offspring, children, race, breed
-
Age:
In use throughout the ages/unknown
-
Area:
All or none
-
Geography:
All or none
-
Frequency:
For Dictionary, in top 20,000 words
-
Source:
General, unknown or too common to say
#16
noun
- declension: 2nd declension
- gender: neuter
Definitions:
- childbirth, delivery
- offspring born at a single delivery
-
Age:
In use throughout the ages/unknown
-
Area:
All or none
-
Geography:
All or none
-
Frequency:
For Dictionary, in top 20,000 words
-
Source:
General, unknown or too common to say
#17
verb
- conjugation: 1st conjugation
- voice: transitive
Definitions:
- beget
- engender/produce/generate (offspring)
- give birth/rise to
- procreate
-
Age:
Latin not in use in Classical times (6-10th centuries) Christian
-
Area:
All or none
-
Geography:
All or none
-
Frequency:
For Dictionary, in top 20,000 words
-
Source:
Latham, “Revised Medieval Word List”, 1980
#18
noun
- declension: 2nd declension
- gender: masculine
Definitions:
- fawn
- hinny (offspring of she-ass and stallion OLD)
- roe deer (KJames)
-
Age:
Latin not in use in Classical times (6-10th centuries) Christian
-
Area:
Agriculture, Flora, Fauna, Land, Equipment, Rural
-
Geography:
All or none
-
Frequency:
2 or 3 citations
-
Source:
William Whitaker’s personal guess
#19
noun
- declension: 2nd declension
- gender: masculine
Definitions:
- fawn
- hinny (offspring of she-ass and stallion OLD)
- roe deer (KJames)
-
Age:
In use throughout the ages/unknown
-
Area:
Agriculture, Flora, Fauna, Land, Equipment, Rural
-
Geography:
All or none
-
Frequency:
2 or 3 citations
-
Source:
“Oxford Latin Dictionary”, 1982 (OLD)
#20
noun
- declension: 2nd declension
- gender: masculine
Definitions:
- child, offspring
-
Age:
In use throughout the ages/unknown
-
Area:
All or none
-
Geography:
All or none
-
Frequency:
2 or 3 citations
-
Source:
“Oxford Latin Dictionary”, 1982 (OLD)
#21
noun
- declension: 2nd declension
- gender: masculine
Definitions:
- offspring
-
Age:
Medieval (11th-15th centuries)
-
Area:
All or none
-
Geography:
All or none
-
Frequency:
2 or 3 citations
-
Source:
Lynn Nelson, Wordlist
#22
noun
- declension: 1st declension
- gender: masculine
Definitions:
- (pl. as epithet of Thebans)
- offspring of a serpent/dragon
-
Age:
In use throughout the ages/unknown
-
Area:
All or none
-
Geography:
All or none
-
Frequency:
Having only single citation in Oxford Latin Dictionary or Lewis + Short
-
Source:
“Oxford Latin Dictionary”, 1982 (OLD)
#23
verb
- conjugation: 1st conjugation
- voice: deponent
Definitions:
- beget
- engender/produce/generate (offspring)
- give birth/rise to
- procreate
-
Age:
Latin not in use in Classical times (6-10th centuries) Christian
-
Area:
All or none
-
Geography:
All or none
-
Frequency:
Having only single citation in Oxford Latin Dictionary or Lewis + Short
-
Source:
Latham, “Revised Medieval Word List”, 1980
#24
verb
- conjugation: 1st conjugation
- voice: intransitive
Definitions:
- breed/spawn
- hatch/bring forth offspring/young
- impregnate, make fruitful (L+S)
-
Age:
In use throughout the ages/unknown
-
Area:
All or none
-
Geography:
All or none
-
Frequency:
Having only single citation in Oxford Latin Dictionary or Lewis + Short
-
Source:
“Oxford Latin Dictionary”, 1982 (OLD)
#25
verb
- conjugation: 1st conjugation
- voice: intransitive
Definitions:
- breed/spawn
- hatch/bring forth offspring/young
- impregnate, make fruitful (L+S)
-
Age:
In use throughout the ages/unknown
-
Area:
All or none
-
Geography:
All or none
-
Frequency:
Having only single citation in Oxford Latin Dictionary or Lewis + Short
-
Source:
Lewis & Short, “A Latin Dictionary”, 1879 (Lewis & Short)