24 in Latin would be "viginti quattor". Sometimes the word order is reversed into "quattor viginti". No, matter it is still XXIV.
Latin for "to the matter" is ad rem
"To the matter" = ad rem.
The Latin word for matter is materia. The Italian word for matter is mat, the German word is egal, and the French word is question.
i jautājumu
"Matter" in the sense of "substance" can be expressed in Latin by the noun materia. In the sense of "an affair, a business" it is res or negotium. In the sense of matter oozing from the body it is pus or sanies.
Ad hoc.
Republic. Republic comes from the Latin for 'res publica' which can mean both public thing or public matter. Republic. Republic comes from the Latin for 'res publica' which can mean both public thing or public matter.
The word "matter" is derived from Latin materia, which itself is derived from mater, mother.
No, Order does not matter
No. Multiplication is commutative so the order of the multiplicands does not matter. Multiplication is associative so the order in which the operations are carried out does not matter.
Olga Spevak has written: 'Le syntagme nominal en Latin' -- subject(s): Noun, Latin language, Grammar, Congresses 'Constituent order in classical Latin prose' -- subject(s): Latin language, Word order, Semantics 'La concession en latin' -- subject(s): Latin language, Concessive clauses, Particles, Conjunctions 'Constituent order in classical Latin prose' -- subject(s): Latin language, Word order, Semantics