English
Etymology
From Latin + -ist.
Noun
Latinist (plural Latinists)
- A scholar who studies the Latin language.
1886 October – 1887 January, H[enry] Rider Haggard, She: A History of Adventure, London: Longmans, Green, and Co., published 1887, →OCLC:As the best plan will be to allow it to speak for itself, I here give the black-letter fac-simile, together with the original Latin without the contractions, from which it will be seen that the writer was a fair mediæval Latinist.
Translations
scholar who studies Latin
- Asturian: llatinista m or f
- Belarusian: латыні́ст m (latyníst), латыні́стка f (latynístka)
- Breton: latinour (br) m
- Bulgarian: латини́ст (bg) m (latiníst), латини́стка f (latinístka)
- Catalan: llatinista m or f
- Esperanto: latinisto
- Finnish: latinisti
- French: latiniste (fr) m or f
- Galician: latinista m or f
- German: Latinist (de) m, Latinistin f
- Italian: latinista (it) m or f
- Latvian: latīnists m, latīniste f
- Lithuanian: lotyni̇̀stas m, lotyni̇̀stė f
- Macedonian: латинист m (latinist)
- Manx: Ladjyner m, Ladjynagh m
- Occitan: latinista (oc) m or f
- Polish: łacinnik (pl) m, latynista (pl)
- Portuguese: latinista (pt), latinista (pt) m or f
- Romanian: latinist (ro) m, latinistă (ro) f
- Russian: латини́ст (ru) m (latiníst), латини́стка (ru) f (latinístka)
- Spanish: latinista m or f
- Ukrainian: латині́ст m (latyníst), латині́стка f (latynístka)
|
German
Pronunciation
Noun
Latinist m (weak, genitive Latinisten, plural Latinisten, feminine Latinistin)
- Latinist (scholar who studies the Latin language)
Declension
Declension of Latinist [masculine, weak]
Further reading
- “Latinist” in Duden online
- “Latinist” in Digitales Wörterbuch der deutschen Sprache