Engleski citati od Citati:Late Latin

  • 2003, Natalie Harwood, The Complete Idiot's Guide to Learning Latin, 2, illustrated edition, Penguin, →ISBN, page 13:
    Late Latin, also known as Medieval Latin or Church Latin, is the language of European monasteries, cathedrals, and schools of the sixth to the sixteenth centuries.
  • 2005, Michael D. Fortescue, Historical linguistics 2003: selected papers from the 16th International Conference on Historical Linguistics, Copenhagen, 11-15 August 2003, illustrated edition, John Benjamins Publishing Company, →ISBN, page 137:
    Schøsler (2001) studies the expression of the category of definiteness (and the rise of the definite article) from Latin to Modern French, showing the evolutions along the sucessive synchronies of the same language (Classical Latin, Late Latin, Old French, Early Modern French, Modern French).
  • 2005, Ole Thomsen, Classica Et Mediaevalia: Revue Danoise De Philologie Et D'histoire, Museum Tusculanum Press, →ISBN, page 326:
    In Classical Latin gyrus means 'circle' and is used of the circular movement of a creature or an object and in gyro means 'in a circle'. In Late Latin we find in gyro as a preposition with the genitive or with the accusative; this usage is found especially in some Christian texts.