Arigato
What the Latin word "puella" means in English is girl. To say girls (as in plural) in Latin you say puellae?
gusano
Come home and watch gossip girl?
Filia diaboli.
It's "ancilla" in the nominative.
Spectant in Latin means they watch or they are watching.
"Puella" means "girl." Also, "virgo" ("virgin") is sometimes used to refer to a girl.
Terra is ground. And Gaia is mother earth. I have seen both used.
from the common reference of "mother nature" and from the greek goddess "Gia" whom was to represent earth, i'd have to say earth is a girl.
The phrase "moon child" in Latin can be translated as "luna filius" for a boy or "luna filia" for a girl.
Technically, there is no article "the" in Latin, as such is implied in the noun itself.For example, when in English you would have to say "the man" or "a man" to be grammatically correct, the same is not true in Latin--there are no definite or indefinite articles, for they are replaced by suffixes that give to the noun different meanings. For example: Puella (girl)singularnominative: puella (the girl)genitive: puellae (of the girl)dative: puellae (to the girl, for the girl)accusative: puellam (to the girl)vocative: puella (oh, girl!)ablative: puella (by the girl, with the girl, in the girl)The sentence in Latin, "Vir ambulat" could be translated as either "The man is walking" "A man is walking" based on context.If you are composing a Latin sentence based on English, there is no need to include a translation of the article "the." For you have to take into account all the cases that existed in Latin.
it is very addictive and i'd say you should watch it!