the brave men came to the great city.
Homines, viri.
Homines, viri.
'Men about war.'
Viri; homines means men in Latin.
Viri could be the genitive singular or the nominative (or vocative) plural of the Latin vir, a male person; or it might be the genitive singular of virus, a slime or snake venom.
The plural form of virus is viruses. It is not "viri".
Viri can be downloaded from any website without you knowing it; that is why anti-spyware is so important...however, trusted websites like Google and the BBC will have powerful computers stopping hackers from embedding viri in their sites. On the other hand, pornographic sites are breeding grounds for viri, because hackers realise so many people just use them.
I believe that is Latin for These are the men of the day.
Gianfranco Ciabatti has written: 'In corpore viri'
virus, viri (masculine)
Viri auri ("men of gold").
Viri do not need nutrients. They take over cells and use the cell's metabolism to reproduce.