Citations:Neo-Latin

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
Jump to navigation Jump to search

English citations of Neo-Latin

2015, “Introduction”, in Sarah Knight, Stefan Tilg, editors, The Oxford Handbook of Neo-Latin, New York: Oxford University Press, →ISBN, page 1:
When we talk about "Neo-Latin", we refer to the Latin … from the time of the early Italian humanist Petrarch (1304-1374) up to the present day
2011, David Butterfield, “Neo-Latin”, in James Clackson, editor, A Blackwell Companion to the Latin Language, Chichester: Wiley-Blackwell, page 303:
Neo-Latin, sometimes called New Latin, is the term typically applied to the use of Latin as a language for original composition, translation or occasionally general communication from the period of the Italian Renaissance up to the modern day
1882, Statutes proposed to be made by the University of Oxford commissioners for Corpus Christi college, Oxford University Press, page 58:
The Corpus Christi Professor of the Romance or Neo-Latin Languages … shall lecture and give instuction on the history and literature of the languages of Modern Europe which are derived from the Latin
1881, Prince L Bonaparte, “Slavonic Speech Sounds”, in Transactions of the Philological Society, United Kingdom: Philological Society of Great Britain, page 401:
For the Neo-Latin languages I have acted more independently. Two of them, French and Italian, are equally native to me …