Via fracta.
The Latin word for broken is: fracta.
The latin word for road is vía.
It is the Latin word for "road"
Kaputt means "broken", as in 'mein Auto ist kaputt!' (my car is broken!)
Broken, shattered.
The Latin word for "road" is 'via.' The ablative plural of 'via' is 'viis.'
The Latin root word for path is "via," which means road or way.
The word "fragility" originates from the Latin word "fragilis," meaning "easily broken" or "brittle." It is derived from the Latin root "frangere," which means "to break." The word fragility is used to describe the quality of being delicate, vulnerable, or easily broken.
"Viator," literally "user of the road" Can be masculine or feminine.
The Latin word via means a road, or a way (an unpaved track or footpath).
Yes. Pontefract in West Yorkshire is on what was the Roman road from York to Doncaster. The name derives from the Latin Pontus Fractus which means "broken bridge."
Interruption is from Latin inter "in the midst" and ruptio "a breaking; fracture." Ruptio is from the past participle (ruptus, "broken") of the verb rumpere "to break."