venio means come.
The English command 'Come in' is in the imperative mood. So too are the equivalents in Latin. One equivalent is Introi, which is the second person form in the singular. Another equivalent is Introite, which is the form of the verb with the plural subject 'you all'.
"Venisti" (singular) or "venistis" plural.
farli pipi
Navigo is first conjugation Latin, the translation being "I am sailing." Latin verbs come with tense and person indicators, telling you who (I, you, he/she/it, we, you all, they) does it and when.
you say helmet in latin (casco)<- in latin
To say "Who am I?" in Latin you can say "quisnam sum Ego?"
How do you say determined in Latin?
the Latin word for come is 'venio'
infitialis is the word we say in latin
To say the word lightning in Latin, a person would say the word "ignis." To say thunder in Latin, the word is "tonitrua."
Leo is Latin for lion, so in that sense you could say that Leo came from Rome.
There are no articles in Latin. (a, the, an)
my is "mihi" in latin