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Definition of New Latin
1. Noun. Latin since the Renaissance; used for scientific nomenclature.
Definition of New Latin
1. Proper noun. The Latin language spoken and written after the Middle Ages, including Renaissance Latin, Ecclesiastical Latin, and Contemporary Latin. ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Lexicographical Neighbors of New Latin
Literary usage of New Latin
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Encyclopaedia Britannica: A Standard Work of Reference in Art, Literature (1907)
"New Latin But, small as were the direct legal or political infusion changes which
it wrought, the conversion of the lino Er.g- English, even setting aside ..."
2. The New Schaff-Herzog Encyclopedia of Religious Knowledge: Embracing by Johann Jakob Herzog, Philip Schaff, Albert Hauck (1908)
"The same is the case with subsequent editions. More important was the new Latin
edition of 1540, where the apology is said to have been diligenter ..."
3. The Classical World by Classical Association of the Atlantic States (1908)
"... Latin Course Potter New Method for Caesar Daniell-Brown New Latin Composition
Johnston-Sanford Caesar D'Ooge Cicero Fairclough-Brown Virgil BENJ. H. SA. ..."
4. The History of the Popes, from the Close of the Middle Ages: Drawn from the by Ludwig Pastor, Ralph Francis Kerr, Frederick Ignatius Antrobus (1908)
"... THE New Latin POETRY. I87 the ancients was most closely approached in the latter.
Next to classical themes, the favourite subjects were drawn from ..."
5. The Monroe Doctrine: An Interpretation by Albert Bushnell Hart (1916)
"... CHAPTER II THE New Latin-AMERICAN POWERS 1783-1823 EUROPEAN COLONIES IN AMERICA
IN 1783 WHEN the Treaty of Peace of 1782-83 recognized the United States ..."