Alpha or gubernare
"To steer" a ship is gubernare, a term borrowed (like much of the Latin nautical vocabulary) from Greek.The word dirigere, literally "to set straight", can also mean "to steer, to guide".
Depending on context, steer can be translated as:verblenkensteuernführennounRind
Direct is made of the Latin prefix dis- ( apart) and rectus, the past participle of regere, to steer.
The English word "Govern" came from the Old French word "governer" and they stole it from the Latin "guberno". It means "To steer" or "To direct" (as in "to steer a ship"). The suffix "-ment" comes from the Latin "-mentum", roughly translated to "the state of being acted upon". so "Government" would be "The state of being directed"
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?
They say to steer "into" the skid.
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."
There are no articles in Latin. (a, the, an)
my is "mihi" in latin