The word "terrible" does not originate from any Latin terms. The Latin term for one may be looking for is the Latin word "atrox." This word is the Latin for terrible, Horror, and cruel.
The word perfect originated between the years 1250 to 1300. It is derived from the Latin word perfectus and it means without any flaws.
"Macaca fuscata" is scientific name for the Japanese macaque or "snow monkey". Such names follow Latin rules for their formation, but often contain terms that would have been unknown to any speaker of Latin.
Any blood vessel, whether artery or vein, is vena in Latin.Vena will also do for a vein of ore.
Nova is based on the Latin word for "new." Therefore its use as a surname can have originated in any country where the language is based on Latin. These are the Romance Languages and include Italian, French, Spanish, Portuguese, Romanian, and several other languages.
Materia medica is a Latin term for collected knowledge about any substance used for healing. Pedanius Dioscorides, an ancient Greek physician, wrote about this in the 1st century AD.
The rectangle has four of them, and any parallelogram that has one of them is a rectangle.
No it was not, it originated in Beijing, China. Would you like any more info about Honda?
Ex post facto is Latin for "after the fact". In terms of research it is a design in which research is done after the thing which is to be researched has occurred without any influence by the researcher.
The misspelled word infasie could refer to any of the words listed below:In legal terms of law, In Facie Curiae is Latin and means before or in the presence of the court; contempt.In religious terms, In Facie Ecclesiae is Latin and means within the church.Infancy means the first months of a child's life; the beginning of early childhood when one is an infant.
"Tacet" is the equivalent of "silent" in the glossary of musical terminology.Specifically, the word comes from the classical Latin of the ancient Romans. It literally means "It is silent." In terms of music, there is to be no sound, from any person or any instrument.
The Latin word for any cosmetic is medicamen.
In latin, there actually isn't any articles so...