sanguine
121nee veniam effuso sanguine casus habet — /nek viyniyam, afyuwzow saerjgwaniy, keysas heybat/ Where blood is spilled, the case is unpardonable …
122Consanguineus est quasi eodem sanguine natus — A person related by consanguinity is, as it were, one born of the same blood …
123Deficiente uno sanguine non potest esse haeres — Devoid of the same blood (as the alleged ancestor), he cannot be an heir (of that alleged ancestor) …
124Nec veniam effuso sanguine, casus habet — Nor is there any occasion for indulgence where there is a shedding of blood …
125quasi-sanguine — adj.; quasi sanguinely, adv …
126croydon-sanguine — …
127SANG — sanguine …
128sanguinary — sanguine, sanguinary Both words are derived from the Latin word sanguis (stem sanguin ) meaning ‘blood’. Sanguine originally meant ‘blood coloured’ but now primarily means ‘optimistic, confident’ from an earlier association of blood (one of the… …