| WOETO | "___ the conquered!": Livy |
| CAVE | Roma, ____ tibi! Rome, for yourself beware! (Livy 35.21.4) |
| VICI | Villages I have conquered! |
| SAWI | "I came, I ___, ___ conquered!" |
| ICAMEI | Caesar's "___ saw, I conquered!" |
| CAME | "I ___, I saw, I conquered!" |
| QUIRITIBUSQUE | Consul acting "pro populo Romano ____" (Livy 8.6), for the Roman people and the ancient citizens |
| BOLDEST | "In difficult and desperate cases, the ____ counsels are the safest" (Livy) |
| PADUA | Immortalised in The Taming of the Shrew and a play by Oscar Wilde, city in Veneto where Livy was born and Galileo taught at its university (5) |
| PATAVINITY | The dialectal characteristics of Padua, as seen in the writings of Livy (10) |
| LEX | The law, to Livy |
| ENVY | "___, like lightning, seeks the highest places": Livy |
| FURIALE | Of the furies, furious, e.g. ____ carmen, Livy 10.41 |
| LUCUBRANTES | Burning the midnight oil? Sic Lucretia et ancillae suae Livy AUC 1.57.9 |
| AUGUSTANAGE | The golden era of Latin literature when Horace, Ovid, Virgil, Livy, Propertius and Tibullus flourished (8,3) |
| CAMPUSMARTIUS | Ager Tarquiniorum, consecrated to the God of War, vide Livy 2.5 |
| BALINEA | Baths — one of many distractions that sapped the strength of Hannibal's troops, vide Livy 23.18.12 |
| ELICIEBAT | He was coaxing, cajoling (like the consul Aemilius, teasing out allegations against Fulvius, Livy 38.43.6) |
| ECCE | "Look!" to Livy |
| MCC | 1200, to Livy |