Latin English Dictionary

latine - English

abominantur in English:

1. An An


You're an angel!
I'd rather not eat the meat from an animal that was cloned.
When speaking to an international audience, it is perhaps best to speak English a little slower than usual.
In the blink of an eye, the tennis-ball-sized dumpling had disappeared.
Going to the little girl's room is an euphemistic expression for "going to the toilet."
All forms of life have an instinctive urge to survive.
A very elderly couple is having an elegant dinner to celebrate their 75th wedding anniversary.
President McKinley sent an immediate answer.
Incidentally, this room doesn't have anything like an air conditioner. All it has is a hand-held paper fan.
Japan's foreign aid is decreasing in part because of an economic slowdown at home.
On an average how many miles do you walk a day?
An unforgettable event occurred.
Two hundred fifty kilograms is an extraordinary weight even for a sumo wrestler.
An expensive watch is not necessarily a good one.
Zamenhof, the creator of Esperanto, was an ophthalmologist.