-
spectaculum "a show" from
spectare "to view, watch"
frequentative form of
specere "to look at." The word
spectacle has also been a term of art in theater...
- late
Latin fronti****ium,
composed of the
Latin frons ('forehead') and
specere ('to look at'). It was
synonymous with 'metoposcopy'. In English, it was...
- 'prophecy') au****y/au****ation → see
theriomancy (Latin avis, 'bird' +
specere, 'to look at')
austromancy → see
theriomancy /ˈɔːstroʊmænsi/: by wind (Latin...
- form au****is] avi-, stem of avis, "bird" plus -spex, "observer", from
specere) Troxler, Howard, "Electoral
Abuse in the Late
Roman Republic" (2008)....
-
Coelispex (Roman) (/ˈsɛlɪspɛks/ SEL-isp-eks), from
Latin coelum, "sky", and
specere "to look at"
Iatromantis (/aɪˌætrəˈmæntɪs/ eye-AT-rə-MAN-tis; Ἰατρομάντις...
- ‘push’) saltāre, 'dance, jump' (< salīre, 'leap') spectāre, 'watch' (<
specere, more
usually a****ere, 'take a look at') versāre, ‘turn often, keep turning’...
- spatial, spatiate,
subspace spec-, -****-, spect- look
Latin per****uus,
specere, spectare,
speculari aspect, aspectual, au****ate, au****e, au****ious...
- spatial, spatiate,
subspace spec-, -****-, spect- look
Latin per****uus,
specere, spectare,
speculari aspect, aspectual, au****ate, au****e, au****ious...
- fronti****ium
stems from the
latin frons meaning ‘forehead or front’ and
specere meaning ‘to look at'. As a whole, the word took on the meaning: ‘a view...