abactor a cattle lifter, who steals sheep or cattle in herds, not singly.
Lucius (Roman praenomen); (abbreviation L.)
Labarum; Roman military standard; Constantine's banner of cross w/monogram XP;
fall to pieces, break up; waver; yield
lambda (Greek letter); (used as a symbol for fellatio)
speaking fault (esp. with letter L);
stain, blemish; slight stain; minor disgrace;
make unsteady/totter, loosen, shake; subvert power/authority; weaken resolve
to shake
to shake, loesen /impair.
disturb /shake violently
be made unsteady; be loosened/shaken; be subverted; (labefacio PASS);
a little lip /a small washing vessel.
Labeo; (Roman cognomen); one who has large/blubber lips (L+S);
landslip/subsidence; disaster/debacle; fault/defect/blot/stain/blemish/dishonor
infamy /misfortune
blemish
lip; (alt. form of labium)
lip (labiae : lips).
transient, fleeting, slippery.
liability to slip.
a marsh; a fen.
having large lips.
lip; flange;
to totter.
slip, slip and fall; slide, glide, drop; perish, go wrong
labor, work, toil.
slide
Work conquers all things. (Virgil)
distress
Latin is a classical language that was spoken in ancient Rome and is now used as a liturgical and scholarly language. It is the official language of the Roman Catholic Church and is written in the Latin alphabet. Latin is a dead language, meaning that it is no longer spoken as a native language, but it has had a significant influence on many modern languages, including English, Spanish, French, and Italian.
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