Catholicon (latin dictionary)
0 sources
Catholicon (latin dictionary)
Summary
Catholicon (latin dictionary) is a dictionary of the Latin language[1]. Catholicon (latin dictionary) draws 24 Wikipedia views per month (dictionary_of_the_latin_language category, ranking #2 of 2).[2]
Key Facts
- Catholicon (latin dictionary) authored John of Genoa[3].
- Catholicon (latin dictionary)'s image is recorded as Catholicon 1460 Spread.jpg[4].
- Catholicon (latin dictionary)'s instance of is recorded as dictionary of the Latin language[5].
- Catholicon (latin dictionary)'s instance of is recorded as reference work[6].
- Catholicon (latin dictionary)'s genre is recorded as dictionary[7].
- Catholicon (latin dictionary)'s VIAF cluster ID is recorded as 213999899[8].
- Catholicon (latin dictionary)'s VIAF cluster ID is recorded as 11159474045927660279[9].
- Catholicon (latin dictionary)'s VIAF cluster ID is recorded as 7167802703817770287[10].
- Catholicon (latin dictionary)'s language of work or name is recorded as medieval Latin[11].
- Catholicon (latin dictionary)'s publication date is recorded as +1286-00-00T00:00:00Z[12].
- Catholicon (latin dictionary)'s Freebase ID is recorded as /m/05635j[13].
- Catholicon (latin dictionary)'s has edition or translation is recorded as Catholicon de Lille[14].
- Catholicon (latin dictionary)'s different from is recorded as Catholicon[15].
- Catholicon (latin dictionary)'s FAMA work ID is recorded as 254337[16].
- Catholicon (latin dictionary)'s ARLIMA ID is recorded as 15306[17].
- Catholicon (latin dictionary)'s derivative work is recorded as Catholicon Anglicum[18].
- Catholicon (latin dictionary)'s form of creative work is recorded as prose[19].
- Catholicon (latin dictionary)'s Goodreads work ID is recorded as 65990623[20].
Body
Works and Contributions
Catholicon (latin dictionary) authored John of Genoa[3].
Why It Matters
Catholicon (latin dictionary) draws 24 Wikipedia views per month (dictionary_of_the_latin_language category, ranking #2 of 2).[2] Catholicon (latin dictionary) has Wikipedia articles in 6 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[21]