calumnia - Wiktionary, the free dictionary calumnia f (genitive calumniae); first declension A cunning device, trickery, artifice, sophistry, chicanery A pretence, evasion, subterfuge A misrepresentation, false statement, fallacy, cavil A false accusation or prosecution, malicious charge
calumny - Wiktionary, the free dictionary The verb is derived from French calomnier (“ to slander ”), from Late Latin calumniāre, from Latin calumpniārī, [3] calumniārī (“ to blame unjustly, misrepresent, calumniate; (law) to accuse falsely, bring false information against ”), from calumnia (see above) + -or
calúmnia - Wiktionary, the free dictionary This page was last edited on 4 May 2025, at 18:20 Definitions and other text are available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License; additional
kalumnia - Wiktionary, the free dictionary "kalumnia", in Charles du Fresne du Cange’s Glossarium Mediæ et Infimæ Latinitatis (augmented edition with additions by D P Carpenterius, Adelungius and others, edited by Léopold Favre, 1883–1887)
calumnias - Wiktionary, the free dictionary accusative plural of calumnia; Portuguese [edit] Noun [edit] calumnias plural of calumnia; Verb [edit] calumnias second-person singular present indicative of calumniar; Spanish [edit] Noun [edit] calumnias f pl plural of calumnia; Verb [edit] calumnias second-person singular present indicative of calumniar;
calumniar - Wiktionary, the free dictionary 1 Mostly obsolete, now mainly used in legal language 2 Argentine and Uruguayan voseo prefers the tú form for the present subjunctive
calumnior - Wiktionary, the free dictionary calumnior (present infinitive calumniārī, perfect active calumniātus sum); first conjugation, deponent to depreciate, misrepresent, cavil at, calumniate, blame unjustly, blackmail calumniare audacter, quia semper aliquid adhæret Slander boldly, for something always sticks – Johannes Jacobus Manlius, Locorum Communium Collectanea, page 393 (1562)