Grammatical Latin Phrases
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First Phrase Abbreviations Mottos
Academic Ceremonial Diplomatic Ecclesiastical Grammatical Legal Mathematical Medical Musical Philosophical
Augustine Caesar Cato Cicero Erasmus Horace Ovid Pliny Seneca Syrus Tacitus Virgil
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- Ad marginem - At margin (Grammatical term - Notes written in a book)
- Addenda et corrigenda - To be added and corrected (Grammatical term - Added to the end of a book so that it will be fixed in the next edition)
- Errata - Error (Grammatical term - Refers to corrections added after the book is published)
- Et alii - And others (Grammatical term - When there are more than one author, the name of the main author is mention followed by et alii - Sometimes it is written as: Et alia, or Et allii abbreviated as et al.)
- Et cetera - And the Rest (Grammatical term - Sometimes spelled as Et Coetera or Et Cœtera abbreviated as etc.)
- Etera desunt - The rest is wanting (Grammatical term - When something is missing)
- Exempli gratia - For example (Grammatical term abbreviated as e.g.)
- Ibidem - In the same place (Grammatical term - Used in footnotes to indicate that the reference/source is the same as above - abbreviated as Id. Ibid.)
- Id est - That is (Grammatical term abbreviated as i.e.)
- Nota bene - Note well (Grammatical term - Indicates to pay attention abbreviated as n.b.)
Total: 10
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