- The word
dictator comes from the
Latin word dictātor,
agent noun from
dictare (say repeatedly, ****ert, order). A
dictator was a
Roman magistrate given...
-
diacosipentecontaheptagon dic-, dict- say, speak,
proclaim Latin dīcere, dictus,
dictare benediction, condition, contradict, dictate, dictation, dictator, diction...
- in
modern Romance languages.) cursāre ‘run around’ (< currere, ‘run’)
dictāre ‘dictate’ (< dīcere, ‘speak, say’) dormītāre 'be drowsy, fall asleep' (<...
-
diacosipentecontaheptagon dic-, dict- say, speak,
proclaim Latin dīcere, dictus,
dictare benediction, condition, contradict, dictate, dictation, dictator, diction...
-
dictated songs and
stories to
Melville Jacobs. It
derives from Latin,
dictāre (to ****ert). The
exercise requires at
least two persons: a
reciter and...
- "literary reminiscences" "The
literary use of
words from the
common dialect" (
dictare and
dictitare as well as
classical dicere, "to say")
Languages portal classic...
- of law, the art of
drafting public and
private do****ents. It was
called dictare as
opposed to scribere, i. e. the mere
material execution of such do****ents...