The Latin word Sus literally means "swine."
Other similar words include:
Porca, which would mean "female swine", or the kind of pig that you eat.
The words verris and aper mean "boar."
It is swine.
suíno
Since there was no swine flu like the H1N1/09 pandemic swine flu until discovered in 2009, there was not a specific Latin name for the disease. One could be created from literal translation and would be something like: Orthomyxoviridae porcus. See the related question links section below for other names of the pandemic swine flu.
Pearls before swine
Nope. That would be 'te sus.' Nice try though.
I would say swine flu because it has nothing to do with pigs,boars and others in the swine family.
The root word is "su", it is a possessive adjective meaning his, her, its, their, one's, your.
Since there was no Swine Flu like the H1N1/09 pandemic swine flu until discovered in 2009, there was not a specific Latin name for the disease. One could be created from literal translation and would be something like: Orthomyxoviridae porcus. See the related question links section below for other names of the pandemic swine flu.
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?
A reporter asked Paris Hilton what she thinks about swine flu and she replied, === === Sorry, i don't eat that.