Latin word excisus comes from Latin caedo, Latin de, Latin cado
Dictionary entry | Language | Definition |
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caedo | Latin (lat) | Cut, hew, fell.. Defeat decisively (defeat with heavy losses to the enemy side).. Kill.. Strike, beat. |
de | Latin (lat) | (Late Latin) of persons. From, away from, down from, out of; in general to indicate the person or place from which any thing is taken, etc., with verbs of taking away, depriving, demanding, requesting, inquiring, buying; as capere, sumere, emere, quaerere, discere, trahere, etc., and their compounds.. From, away from, to indicate the place from which someone or something departs or [...] |
cado | Latin (lat) | (impersonal) It happens, occurs, befalls, comes to pass. I cease. I decay. I die. I fall. |
excido | Latin (lat) | (with ablative) I am deprived of, miss, fail to obtain, forfeit, lose. I fall out, from or down, tumble to the ground, collapse, break down, drop. I am lost or forgotten, pass away, perish, disappear. I differ from someone's opinion, disagree with, dissent. I fall out or from involuntarily, slip out, escape. I lose myself, fail; faint, swoon. I slip out or escape from memory (figuratively) I [...] |
excisus | Latin (lat) |