| NOBILISSIMUS | Most noble chap, eg Orgetorix, Caesar, de Bello Gallico 1.2 |
| PERMANSERUNT | They waited and stayed on, eg in acie ____, Caesar de Bello Gallico 8.15 |
| BELGARUM | Of the bravest Gauls, vide Caesar De Bello Gallico I |
| PAULATIM | Little by little, gradually, cf. Caesar de Bello Gallico 1.33 |
| BARNET | Noble chap losing ring somewhere in north London (6) |
| ALECONNER | Smart chap eg expert about northern officer checking wallop |
| PHLEGMATIC | Expressionless chap e.g. lit awkwardly around back of room (10) |
| EARLS | Noble chaps |
| COLOGNE | Chaps, e.g. |
| ULTIMAE | Most remote tribes: ____ nationes, Caes. De Bello Gallico 3.27 |
| COMPERTUM | Id se ab ipsis per eorum nuntios ____ habere Caes. De bello Gallico 1.44 |
| EQUITATU | With cavalry: cum legionibus et ____, Caes. de Bello Gallico 7.90 |
| CAESAR | Writer of "Commentarii de Bello Gallico" |
| REMULCO | A tow-rope (abl.) - navem ____ abstraxit, Caesar de Bello Civili 2.23 |
| COMITATU | With an escort, as Pompey Caesar de Bello Civili 3.96 |
| PERVENERUNT | They arrived: sic "hostes ad legatos exercitumque", Caesar de Bello Civili 2.12 |
| NAEVIUS | Mole-y poet, auctor carminis de bello Punico |
| IOSEPHUS | Flavius ____, scriptor Iudaeus, "de bello Iudaico" |
| THISTLE | Scotland's highest order of chivalry is The Most Ancient and Most Noble Order of the ... |
| OPTIMUM | The best adj. for a most noble thing |