No. This is false.
the word "privacy" is not actually mentioned in the Constitution
It isn't mentioned at all, not once.
(1) Only once does it even say private. (The fifth amendment)(2) The Ninth Amendment reads: "The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people."
Specific changes to the Constitution are called amendments. There are 27 amendments; the first 10 are called the Bill of Rights.
The Samoan language does not have a specific word for \"privacy\", but the term \"Alu ese ma a\'u\" can be used as a request to be left alone.
The word 'amendments' is the plural form of the noun'amendment', a word for an alteration, correction, addition, or deletion to a document; a word for a thing.
the first 10 amendments known as bill of rights, were added in 1791.
Amend.
Private is an adjective (descriptive word) Privacy is a noun (naming word)
"Privacy" is fundamentally an abstract noun, but like many other nouns it can be used as a "substantive adjective". Example as a noun: Howard Hughes vigilantly guarded his privacy. Example as a substantive adjective: That is a privacy lock and can not be opened from the outside at all.
The noun privacy is an uncountable noun, a word for an abstract concept.Differences for the noun privacy is expressed using an adjective (some privacy, complete privacy) or as the object of a preposition (in privacy, with privacy).
in 1989 the bicentennial of the first ten amendments to the U.S. Constitution, the Bill of Rights, was celebrated