I would guess it would be proficere, from which Eng. profit comes from via French, or you could say simply iuvare/juvare which means to "enjoy" (in its abstract sense, with an object). Best Latin word for 'thrive' is vigere.
In Latin, the word life is "vita", and to live, as a verb, is translated as "vivere".
Another verb for for live is "habitare" which means to live as in inhabit or dwell.
If you mean 'alive' as an adjective (opposed to dead), it's 'vivus'.
growth n incrementum nt, auctus m.
The Latin translation for the word migrate as a verb is migrare.
Latin doesn't have a word for "the"
The Latin translation for Brass is Orichalcum.
what is the translation into latin for In the beginning was the word
Latin doesn't have a word for the. It lacks articles. Thus, "a" "an" and "the" are not in Latin.
The Latin equivalent of 'Live for the day' is Vive pro die. In the word-by-word translation, the verb 'vive' means '[you] live'. The preposition 'pro' means 'for'. The noun 'die' means 'day'.
Furtim is the Latin word for "by stealth"
Creator is both the English and the Latin word.
Ecclesia.
statua
admiratio
Amissa