yes
Translating English words to Latin can be hard. Pain in Latin is dolor, morsus, poena, angor, ango, cruciatus, adflictio, poena, and afflictio.
The word "penalty" comes from the Latin word "poena," which means punishment.
As is common with all Latin words, they become the root of many of our English words. Poena seems to be the root of Pain and Punishment.In Roman mythology, Poena(also Poine) is the spirit of punishment and the attendant of punishment to Nemesis, the goddess of divine retribution. The Latin word poena, "pain, punishment, penalty", gave rise to English words such as subpoenaand pain. The original word is the Ancient Greek poinḗ(ποινή), also meaning "penalty."
Wordly Wise book 7 lesson 8, eh? I'm stuck on the same problem. Ok, I'm basically commenting on this. Also, I am stuck on that too. I found it funny that you guys are stuck too. But, the amswer is impunity. So... good luck.
One word is subpoena which is a legal document summoning someone to court.
Impunity has four syllables.
The root word for impunity is punity. The prefix is im. That makes it a compound word.
the Latin word for come is 'venio'
The word "impunity" is a noun. An example of a sentence using the word would be: The coach's sons enjoyed the impunity that came with their last name.
The prince enjoyed the impunity that resulted from being the king's son.
Yes the word in latin is addicere which means to be sentenced in latin
The suffix of "impunity" is "-ity." It is added to the base word "impune" to form the noun "impunity," which means exemption from punishment or loss.