Titus, Roman praenomen; (abbreviation T.)
of tobacco
of tobacco
tobacco addiction
tobacco
horse-fly
a tabarder or tabiter, a scholar at Queen's College, Oxford.
a tabard, a short tunic worn by heralds, priests, and others.
melt; dissolve; subdue;
melted; desolved
be melted/desolved
small board; writing tablet; picture; ballot; deed plural, document, letter;
letter, document.
notary; scrivener; document-drafter;
a board for the game of tables.
factor;
a boarded partition.
legal clerk, one who draws up legal documents; messenger (Erasmus);
the office of notary.
rot away, decay; waste away;
tavern, inn; booth, hut, cottage, hove, small shop (Nelson)
a tabernacle or pyx for reserving the sacrament.
retailing;
small shop
wasting away; decay; putrefaction; fluid resulting from corruption or decay;
melt, dissolve; dry up, evaporate; waste away, dwindle away; (mental aspect)
waste away
to touch.
consuming
wasting away, emaciated, putrefying, rotten; accompanied by wasting
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.
English is a West Germanic language of the Indo-European language family, with its earliest forms spoken by the inhabitants of early medieval England. It is the most widely spoken language in the world today, with approximately 1.5 billion people speaking it as a native language. English is also the official language of many countries, such as the United States, United Kingdom, Australia, Canada, and New Zealand. English is also commonly used as a lingua franca in other countries, such as India, Pakistan, and South Africa.