Possible Questions:
- What Cicero spoke
- ___-American
- A quarter of Paris
- Old tongue
- Word after pig or before Quarter
- Pig ___
- Mass communication?
- High-school subject
- Caesar's tongue
- Homo sapiens, e.g.
- School course
- Kind of quarter
- Cicero's tongue
- Cato's tongue
- Caesar's language
- ___ America
- Mass language
- Livy's tongue
- Language for the masses?
- Forum talk
- "E pluribus unum," e.g.
- Tiberius' tongue
- Status quo language?
- Pig __
- Language of ancient Rome
- Language for the masses
- Exempli gratia, e.g.
- ''E pluribus unum,'' e.g.
- Virgil's tongue
- Romance language
- Quarter of Paris
- Livy's language
- Legal language
- Forum language
- "Aeneid" language
- What Mr. Chips taught
- Vulgate's language
- The talk of the Forum?
- Terence's tongue
- South American
- Source of much legalese
- Quarter preceder
- Quarter in Paris
- Paris Quarter
- One of the Americas
- Nero's native tongue
- Many mottoes are written in it
- Language of many a motto
- Language of Lucretius
- Language course
- Forum talk was in it
- Desi Arnaz, e.g.
- Classical tongue
- Classical language
- Classic subject
- Classic language
- Catholic Church language
- Caesar spoke it
- ___ Quarter
- Word with lover or America
- Word with ''America'' or ''lover''
- What Seneca spoke
- What Forum addresses were in
- What Caesar spoke
- Vulgar language?
- Trajan's tongue
- Tongue of Tiberius
- Tiberius's tongue
- The Vatican's language
- The tongue of Tiberius
- Taxonomy language
- Tacitus's tongue
- Speech in the Forum
- Sine qua non e.g.
- Seneca's tongue
- Root of many of our words
- Root of all Romance languages
- Romance languages ancestor
- Roman language
- Quorum's origin
- Quo vadis for example
- Quarter type in Paris
- Quarter of fame
- Pig language?
- Parisian quarter
- Parent of romance languages
- One-time mass communication medium?
- Nero's tongue
- Mr. Chips's class in "Goodbye, Mr. Chips"
- Mass communication medium?
- Lucan's tongue
- Low, Vulgar or Late
- Like the samba and salsa
- Like salsa music
- Like most South Americans
- Like many inscriptions
- Like many abbreviated terms in footnotes
- Like Cugat's rhythm
- Like about half of American states' mottos
- Like "E pluribus unum"
- Language of the masses, once
- Language of the masses no longer
- Language of science
- Language of many courtroom phrases
- Language of law
- Language of Cicero
- Language for legal terminology
- Kind of mass
- Kind of Grammy awards
- Julius Caesar's language
- It can be vulgar
- Hogwarts motto language
- Galba's tongue
- Forum tongue
- Follower of Low or Vulgar
- Famed quarter
- Exempli gratia, for example
- Caesar's medium
- Brazilian e.g.
- Amo, veni, ubi, etc.
- Amo, esse, ego, etc.
- Alternative to vernacular, historically
- "Dies Irae" language
- "Amo, amas" class
- "Ad hominem" source
- . . . in this language
- ____ America