释义 |
Latino-|ˈlætɪnəʊ| used as combining form of Latin a. 2 and 4 b, as in Latino-Faliscan, Latino-Jazz, Latino-Sabellian. Also (with Latino = abl. of L. Latīnus) Latino sine flexione, the basis for the international language Interlingua.
1939L. H. Gray Found. Lang. 332 The Italic dialects fall into three groups: Latino-Faliscan, Osco-Umbrian, and Sabellian. 1954Pei & Gaynor Dict. Ling. 121 Latino-Faliscan, a branch of the Italic group of the Indo-European family of languages, consisting of the extinct languages Latin, Faliscan, Hernician and Praenestinian. 1958P. Gammond Decca Bk. Jazz xxi. 265 It is worth remembering, when the history of the Latino-Jazz movement is written, that Kenton and the West Coast boys were years ahead of the boppers and the East Coast ‘cool’ men in hitching their wagon to the Latin star.
1880A. H. Sayce Introd. Sci. of Lang. II. vii. 110 We find in Italy two great stocks, the Iapygian and the Latino-Sabellian. 1928O. Jespersen Internat. Lang. i. 45 In 1903 the famous Italian mathematician G. Peano started his Latino sine flexione... The idea is to take the ablative of each Latin noun and one simple form of each verb to be used practically everywhere. 1939L. H. Gray Found. Lang. 35 Esperanto, Ido, Latino sine flexione. 1946H. Jacob On Choice of Common Lang. 16 Latino sine flexione, or Interlingua, as Peano called his system. |