Crossword-Solution: LATINITY 8 letters, 1 clue 🏆 scrabble score: 11

Dictionary

Word Word Type Definition
Latinity n. The Latin tongue, style, or idiom, or the use thereof;
specifically, purity of Latin style or idiom.

We have 1 clue for the answer “LATINITY”

Clue Answers
facility in the use of Latin 1 answer
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Kind of apple
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E
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A
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T
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E
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R
Hint 1 meaning
One who, or that which, eats.
Hint 2 anagram
EERTA
Hint 3 another clue
greedy person
9 +1

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Sentences with LATINITY (5)

With a store of classical learning not very common in that age, and with a simplicity of language seldom found in monastic Latinity, he has moulded into something like a regular form the scattered fragments of Roman, British, Scottish, and Saxon history.
The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle Unknown 1996
From this particular instance of cowardice, _murcare_ is used as synonymous to _mutilare_, by the writers of the middle Latinity.
The History of The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire Edward Gibbon 1996
The Jesuit’s learning is copious and correct; his Latinity is pure, his method clear, his argument profound and well connected; but he is the slave of the fathers, the scourge of heretics, and the enemy of truth and candor, as often as they are inimical to the Catholic cause.
The History of The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire Edward Gibbon 1996
The Charlotte Bronte who used the English of a world long corrupted by "one good custom"--the good custom of Gibbon's Latinity grown fatally popular--could at any time hold up her head amongst her reviewers; for her there was no sensitive interior solitude in that society.
Hearts of Controversy Alice Meynell 2005
And the meaner office of protection against reviewers and the world was doubtless done by the meaner Latinity.
Hearts of Controversy Alice Meynell 2005

Quotes with LATINITY (1)

A really cultured woman, like a really cultured man, is all the simpler and the less obtrusive for her knowledge; it has made her see herself and her opinions in something like just proportions; she does not make it a pedestal from which she flatters herself that she commands a complete view of men and things, but makes it a point of observation from which to form a right estimate of herself. She neither spouts poetry nor quotes Cicero on slight provocation; not because she t…
George Eliot Silly Novels by Lady Novelists