[t͡ʃa]
1. masculine noun Dog.
Etymology: From Latin canis.
[t͡ʃa]
1. masculine noun Dog.
Etymology: From Latin canis.
[au̯ˈkeʎ]
1. masculine noun Bird.
Etymology: From Latin avicellum.
[peɾeˈʃo]
1. feminine noun Person.
Etymology: From Latin persona.
[ˈfama]
1. feminine noun Woman.
Etymology: From Latin femina via French femme.
2. feminine noun Fame.
Etymology: From Latin fama.
[peʃ]
1. masculine noun Fish.
Etymology: From Latin piscis.
[dou̯z]
1. numeral Two.
Etymology: From Latin duos.
[ˈʎu]
1. feminine noun Moon (in uppercase), satellite (in lowecase).
Etymology: From Latin luna.
[aˈkeu̯]
1. demonstrative determiner, masculine singular That.
Spelling: Before words beginning with a vowel or h-, it turns into aceul’, with word ligature (both words are written together without intermediate spaces). For masculine plural: aceus; for feminine singular: aceua, or aceual’ before words beginning with a vowel or h-; for feminine plural: aceuas.
2. demonstrative pronoun, masculine singular That one.
Spelling: Before words beginning with a vowel or h-, it turns into aceul’, with word ligature (both words are written together without intermediate spaces). For masculine plural: aceus; for feminine singular: aceua, or aceual’ before words beginning with a vowel or h-; for feminine plural: aceuas.
Etymology: From Latin eccum ille.
[nos]
1. personal pronoun We (subject), us (object, only after a preposition).
Etymology: From Latin nos.