No, it means 'innkeeper.'
The Latin word caupo means "a petty tradesman". The commonest derivative of this in modern English is the word "cheap". Old English had the word ceapian, meaning "to trade", which represents an early borrowing of caupo into Germanic (German still has the word kaufen, "to buy", from the same source). The expression "god chep" in Middle English meant "a good bargain", and this led "cheap" to develop its modern sense of "inexpensive".
Ex Anglica in Latinum is the Latin equivalent of 'English to Latin'. In the word by word translation, the preposition 'ex' means 'from'. The noun 'Anglica' means 'English'. The preposition 'in' means 'in'. The noun 'Latinum' means 'Latin'.
Quī in Latin means "what" or "which" or "who" in English.
latin
Latin "Aqua" means water in English.
What the Latin word "silva" means in English is forest. Silvae means forests.
Custos is Latin. In English, it means 'Guard'.
The same as it means in English. Latin
Vivere in Italian and Latin means "to live" in English.
It means body in English. It comes from Latin and is found in Spanish and Italian.
The Latin word for 'merchant' or 'wholesale trader' is mercator. It's a masculine gender noun that derives from the verb 'mercor', which means 'to carry on a trade'. It's considered the opposite of 'caupo', which applies to 'a small innkeeper, retail trader, or shopkeeper'. Its meaning is different from 'negotiator', which refers to 'a businessman, especially a banker'.
In Latin Grumio translated to English means cook.