Associations to the word «Lombard»
Noun
- Relic
- Royce
- Empire
- Nobility
- Monastery
- King
- Saxon
- Otto
- Rue
- Peninsula
- Alliance
- Edict
- Raft
- Territory
- Ruler
- Imperial
- Successor
- Hun
- Monarchy
- Northern
- Reign
- Summa
- Siege
- Abbey
- Revolt
- Century
- Aquinas
- Western
- Hector
- Como
- Florence
- Capital
- Seminary
- Danube
- Dietrich
- Romans
- Alps
- Grocer
- Unitarian
- Barbarian
- Duc
- Ufc
- Sentence
- Artwork
- Scholastic
- Goldsmith
- Lambert
- Tyrol
- Rally
- Liber
- Peter
- Porta
- Des
- Fresco
- Incursion
- Boniface
- Coinage
- Scandinavia
- Frederick
- Parma
- Pietro
- Fayette
- Gloss
- Mennonite
- Armagh
- Vance
- Constantine
- Bohemia
- Greek
- Constance
- Banking
- Lender
- Nobleman
- Bologna
- Pratt
- Tko
- Celt
- Benedictine
- Theologian
- Milano
- Chronicler
- Overlord
- Booty
- Tribe
- Migration
Adjective
Wiktionary
LOMBARD, noun. A member of a Germanic people who invaded Italy in the 6th century; a Langobard.
LOMBARD, noun. A native or inhabitant of Lombardy.
LOMBARD, noun. (rare) A banker or moneylender.
LOMBARD, noun. (obsolete) Lombard house
LOMBARD, noun. (military) (historical) A form of cannon.
LOMBARD, proper noun. A romance language spoken in northern Italy and southern Switzerland, see Wikipedia:Lombard language.
LOMBARD, adjective. Of or relating to Lombardy, or the inhabitants of Lombardy.
LOMBARD EFFECT, proper noun. The involuntary tendency of speakers to increase their vocal effort when speaking in the presence of noise.
LOMBARD HOUSE, noun. (dated) A bank or a pawnbroker's shop.
LOMBARD HOUSES, noun. Plural of Lombard house
LOMBARD RATE, noun. (finance) An interest rate charged by a central bank for very short term loans to other banks against an approved collateral.
LOMBARD RATES, noun. Plural of Lombard rate
LOMBARD STREET, proper noun. The money and capital market of London.
Dictionary definition
LOMBARD, noun. A member of a Germanic people who invaded northern Italy in the 6th century.
Wise words
Life has no meaning unless one lives it with a will, at
least to the limit of one's will. Virtue, good, evil are
nothing but words, unless one takes them apart in order to
build something with them; they do not win their true
meaning until one knows how to apply them.