Yes
"Step" is an English equivalent of the Latin word gradus. The masculine singular noun also translates as "degree," "position," "rank" or "stage" according to English context. The pronunciation will be "GRA-doos" in Church and classical Latin.
Centum octoginta
Gradus is the Latin equivalent of 'step'. The Latin word may have the meaning of 'pace', as in the steps in walking. Or it may have the meaning of 'stair'.
(le) fruit is a masc. noun.
I believe Doleo would be the verb (doleo dolere), the word for pain ie a pain (noun) is dolor, doloris (masc)
feles, felis (noun, 3rd, fem) cat; marten/ferret/polecat/wild cat; mouser; inveigler, seducer, tom-cat; thief; cattus, catti (noun, 2nd, masc) cat; wild cat; kind of trout; siege engine; catus, cati (noun, 2nd, masc) cat; wild cat; kind of trout; siege engine; male cat; gattus, gatti (noun, 2nd, masc) cat gatta, gattae (noun, 1st, fem) cat (perhaps female); gateway, gap;
Kamila Gradus was born in 1967.
Hostis(genitive hostis; masc., third declension)
Ben Gradus was born on January 19, 1918.
un bracelet (masc.) is a French noun.
les anniversaires (masc. noun)
"pupa, -ae", fem "Carpus, -i", masc