If you're talking about the action of connecting (a verb), go with:
coniugo, -are: to tie together, to bind, to connect
From there use a participle of some kind (you'll have to conjugate) if you really want to keep the "ing" ending.
If you're talking about a connection, like a noun, then go for:
coniugium, -i: a connection, a bind; a wedding (if that's at all important to your translation?)
"Communicare" which means "to impart" or "participate" "Communicare" which means "to impart" or "participate"
Communication comes from the Latin verb that means "to share."
The Latin word for "message" is nuntius (-i, m.). The same word can also be used to mean "messenger".
As in "Dr. King gave a speech":
oratio orationis, f. speech
There is none it is a dead language, dead before the telephone.
"To communicate/share."
To share or to communicate.
The Latin word for "sermon" is contio (-onis, f.).The Latin word sermo, the source of the English word "sermon", means "speech, conversation, discussion".
preposition
The word impunis is an adjective in French. It is also an adjective in Latin.
To determine the Latin word for pale, the part of speech in which the word is used must be defined. The Latin palus describes a stake, primarily one used to make a fence. If using pale to describe a color, the Latin word would be pallidus, meaning pallid or whitish.
Noun comes first because the subject is the most important word in a sentence, which is essentially a noun ( from Latin nomen "the name") and a verb (from Latin verbum " the word").
There are both Latin and Greek words meaning 'a part of speech that expresses an action'
No. The only proper spelling is "dictionary" (Latin for "pertaining to speech")
The part of speech that arium is a suffix. It comes from the Latin language. Some words it is used in include aquarium and planetarium.
Latin is a language that uses case endings to show the relationship of the parts of speech to the verb and to the rest of the sentence. The Latin word 'fustem' is in the accusative case, as a direct object. It meaning is club, cudgel, staff or stick.
It is a prepositional phrase.
The Latin word 'arduo' means lofty, steep, or towering. Latin has cases to show the relationship of the parts of speech to the verb and to the rest of the sentence. In this case, the adjective is in the masculine singular form of the ablative, as the object of a preposition.
The word "lexicon" is a noun. Here is an example of its usage in a sentence: The lexicon of Latin is extremely complicated.