Definition of Diglot

1. Noun. A bilingual inscription, book, or person. ¹

2. Adjective. Bilingual. ¹

¹ Source: wiktionary.com

Definition of Diglot

1. a bilingual book or edition [n -S]

Lexicographical Neighbors of Diglot

digitus minimus
digitus pedis
digitus primus
digitus quintus
digitus secundus
digitus tertius
digitus valgus
digladiate
digladiated
digladiating
digladiation
digladiations
diglossia
diglossias
diglossic
diglot (current term)
diglots
diglottism
diglottisms
digluconate
diglucosyldiacylglycerol synthase
digluon
diglyceride
diglyceride lipase
diglycerides
diglycine
diglycocoll hydroiodide-iodine
diglyme
diglyph
diglyphs

Literary usage of Diglot

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. A Companion to the Greek Testament and the English Version by Philip Schaff (1883)
"Dr. Oscar von Gebhardt lias issued a similar diglot edition which presents ... These two diglot editions are exceedingly helpful for the comparative study ..."

2. Bibliotheca Wiffeniana: Spanish Reformers of Two Centuries from 1520. Their by Edward Boehmer, Benjamin Barron Wiffen (1883)
"A diglot of the NT, containing the Spanish and the English, appeared in New York in 1850 ... Probably a separate edition of the Spanish text of that diglot. ..."

3. Historical Catalogue of the Printed Editions of Holy Scripture in the by Horace Frederick Moule, Thomas Herbert Darlow, British and Foreign Bible Society Library (1903)
"The Preface contains an allusion to the diglot printed pro IC in 1550 (see No. 58). Latin title, English title, An Advertisement to the Header . ..."

4. The Book of Common Prayer and Books Connected with Its Origin and Growth by Josiah Henry Benton, William Muss-Arnolt (1914)
"diglot, English and Dutch (143, 144) 29 French (129) 26 Mohawk (205, 206) 38 Welsh ... diglot Greek and Latin (121) 24-5 Translations: English Prayer-Book. ..."

5. Reminiscences and Anecdotes of Great Men of India: Both Official and Non by Ram Copal Sanyal (1894)
"The origin of this Bengali newspaper, its gradual develop ment from a vernacular journal into a diglot one, its further rise from a diglot paper into a ..."

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