Answer: LATIN
LATIN is a crossword puzzle answer that we have spotted 173 times.
Referring Clues:
- What Mr. Chips taught
 - Language for the masses
 - Kind of quarter
 - "E pluribus unum," e.g.
 - Forum language
 - Mr. Chips's class in "Goodbye, Mr. Chips"
 - Like many inscriptions
 - Pig ___
 - Like 50-Across and 10-Down
 - See 41-Across
 - Like "E pluribus unum"
 - It can be vulgar
 - "Ad hominem" source
 - Mass communication medium?
 - Mass communication?
 - 7-Down is in it
 - With 71-Across, sort of person who might enjoy this puzzle?
 - Exempli gratia, e.g.
 - Like most South Americans
 - "Dead" language
 - Root of all Romance languages
 - Pig language?
 - One-time language of the Masses?
 - Whence many loanwords
 - Livy's language
 - Mass confusion?
 - Language that may be vulgar
 - Vatican City's official language
 - Status quo language?
 - Classic subject
 - Taxonomy language
 - A quarter of Paris
 - Mass language
 - Classic language, and with 61-Across, hint to the puzzle theme found at the starts of 20-, 37- and 57-Across
 - Romance languages ancestor
 - "Aeneid" language
 - 1-Across topic
 - Tongue of Tiberius
 - Like 35-Across
 - Pig __
 - Language of many courtroom phrases
 - Quorum's origin
 - Language of ancient Rome
 - Like salsa music
 - What Caesar spoke
 - . . . in this language
 - Cato's tongue
 - Language for the masses?
 - Virgil's tongue
 - The talk of the Forum?
 - Word with "America" or "lover"
 - Vulgate's language
 - Tiberius' tongue
 - Language of Lucretius
 - Language of the masses, once
 - ___ America
 - Language of science
 - "E pluribus unum", e.g.
 - Caesar's language
 - What Forum addresses were in
 - Ecclesiatical language
 - Legal language
 - Source of much of English
 - Homo sapiens, e.g.
 - What Seneca spoke
 - ... in this language
 - What Cicero spoke
 - Roman language
 - Caesar's tongue
 - Ceasar's tongue
 - Like many mottoes
 - Hogwarts motto language
 - Caesar spoke it
 - 43-Across, for example
 - Forum talk
 - Classic language
 - Classical language
 - Classic tongue
 - Classical tongue
 - Classics language
 - Forum tongue
 - Old tongue
 - Terence's tongue
 - Livy's tongue
 - Nero's language
 - "Ad hoc," e.g.
 - "Little ____ Lupe Lu"
 - "Little ____ Lupe Lu"
 - With 42-Across, one who might memorize 64-Across?
 - Julius Caesar's language
 - Source of much legalese
 - Like about half of American states' mottos
 - Word after pig or before quarter
 - Forum speech
 - Catholic Church language
 - One-time mass communication medium?
 - See 27-Down
 - The Vatican's language
 - Like the samba and salsa
 - Language of many a motto
 - Like many abbreviated terms in footnotes
 - Forum talk was in it
 - Speech, in the forum
 - "Dies Irae" language
 - Many mottoes are written in it
 - Nero's native tongue
 - Vulgar language?
 - Language of 14-Across
 - Many prayers are said in it
 - Like ego and ergo
 - Old Roman language
 - Source of many legal terms
 - Holy See official language
 - "Amo, amas, amat," e.g.
 - Vatican City language
 - Part of a classical education
 - 19-Across's language
 - Caeser's tongue
 - Like salsa
 - Cicero's language
 - Language of many mottos
 - Caesar's native tongue
 - What Bryn Mawr grads once had to know
 - "Et tu, Brute?" or "Veni, vidi, vici"
 - Like many state mottos
 - Language of old Rome
 - Ipso facto, e.g.
 - "E pluribus unum" language
 - Trajan's tongue
 - Amas,amat
 - Ab absurdo language
 - Language on all current U.S. coins
 - What Julius Caesar spoke
 - What Rowling learned at Exeter
 - What most college mottoes are in
 - Ancient tongue
 - "carpe diem" language
 - Language of 15-Across 4-Down
 - Much of legalese
 - "Et cetera" language
 - Music store category
 - Language of many state mottos
 - Italic language
 - Like the alphabet in Vatican City ... or each letter in the starred answers
 - Foreign language seen on U.S. money
 - ___quarter
 - Pig ___ (pseudo-language)
 - Virgil's language
 - Pig ___ (silly language)
 - Mass medium
 - Like "aurum" for gold and "ferrum" for iron
 - Like "alter ego" and "alma mater"
 - Romance language's root
 - "Tabula rasa" language
 - Vatican language
 - "Et tu" language
 - Language that gave us "e.g."
 - In which "Stella" means "star"
 - Language that gave us "i.e."
 - Language that gave us "ad hoc"
 - "quid pro quo" language
 - "Lux et veritas" language
 - "Veni, vidi, vici" language
 - "Per se" and "quid pro quo" language
 - "In varietate concordia" language
 - ___ trap (Bad Bunny genre)
 - Ancestor of the romance languages
 - Like bossa nova or salsa
 - "Bona fide" language
 - Language of much legalese
 - Like many legal terms
 - Source of many a motto
 - Language that "bona fide" comes from
 
Last Seen In:
- USA Today - July 14, 2025
 - New York Times - July 04, 2025
 - LA Times - April 25, 2025
 - New York Times - January 24, 2025
 - LA Times - October 05, 2024
 - USA Today - July 09, 2024
 - New York Times - June 11, 2024
 - USA Today - May 24, 2024
 - New York Times - April 28, 2024
 - LA Times - March 20, 2024
 - USA Today - December 15, 2023
 - LA Times - October 20, 2023
 - USA Today - May 17, 2023
 - New York Times - May 15, 2023
 - New York Times - May 01, 2023
 - LA Times - February 19, 2023
 - LA Times - November 14, 2022
 - LA Times - June 12, 2022
 - USA Today - March 10, 2022
 - USA Today - January 10, 2022
 
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