Roman Cuisine
Roman Inventions
Church Latin
Latin Derivatives
Pop Culture
100

This food was common in Rome under the name “pullus”, but today some might call it pullus-fil-a

Chicken

100

The architectural feature that the Romans used often, you'll see two of them today at McDonald’s

Arch

100

The name of the Hail Mary in Latin

Ave Maria

100

This is the translation for "ambulam (walking) ad aquae"

Walking to water

100

The Romans were famous for their pantheon of Gods, several of which planets have been named after: name two of these planets

Any Two: Mars, Venus, Jupiter, Mercury, Saturn

200

This food type that comes from the environment surrounding Italy was a staple of Roman households

Seafood

200

The stadium-like structures used for gladiator combat, can still famously be seen today

The Coliseum

200

The name of the book with the words of consecration; the first word is “Roman"

Roman Canon

200

Which word in this sentence is derived from the Latin word “miser”: The rich man was miserable when his money was lost

Miserable

200

The famed demigod son of Zeus who is well known today for his feature Disney movie

Hercules

300

The Roman had this type of food found preserved at Pompeii; it is  called the Panis Quadratus

Bread

300

Romans were famous for these well-built structures that stand the test of time and are still used today to connect locations

Road and/or Bridge

300

This consonant is pronounced with a hard sound in classical Latin and a soft ”ch” sound in church Latin

The letter "C"

300

To get somewhere you would use the Latin word “via”, which translates to this

Road

300

The first dictator of Rome—if only he had watched for the ides of March

Julius Caesar

400

This breakfast item is served at pnd latin club gatherings

Waffles

400

This term was coined first by the original Roman form of government that the US government is partially modeled after

Republic

400

This meeting of the Magisterium allowed for mass to be said in English as well as Latin

Vatican II

400

The English word “ire,”, comes from this similarly spelled Latin word meaning “anger”

iram

400

The first emperor of Rome—his  name has become one of the 12 months of the year, along with his more famous predecessor

Augustus (Octavian)

500

A very common seasoning of Rome, this fish sauce begins with a “G”

Garum

500

Water transportation system that was far ahead of its time

Aqueduct

500

The year that Christianity became the official religion of the Roman Empire

380 AD

500

The meaning a common student question: “Liquitne mihi ire ad latrinam?”

Can I go to the bathroom?

500

This emperor was widely disliked because he was said to have “fiddled” while “Rome burned”

Nero

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