Your question doesn't make sense.
The word 'ere' means a poetic word for the word 'before' or 'previous to'. It originates from the Old English term for 'rather than'. The exact roots are unknown.
The poetic word for before is "ere."
"Colere" is the Latin for the English word "cultivate."The perfect passive participle of colo, -ere is cultus and the supine is cultum.
ere is popular as in ere long(before long)
3-letter word for poetic before is 'ere.'
The word is therein. (It actually has 9 counting "ere.")-- the there he her here herein ere rein inThe word thereby has 7 or 8.-- the there he her here hereby ere by
It's you
ere
dictere is a word from greek
Ere or previous to.
ere
It's very rare that there is a single best translation for a given word in all contexts, and that's certainly the case for "resolve". If you look in an English dictionary, you'll see that the word is both a verb (with multiple definitions) and a noun. You wouldn't expect a single Latin word to cover all the possible meanings.A few Latin words that cover some of the same semantic space as English "resolve" are:come to a firm decision: decerno (-ere, -crevi, -cretum); constituo (-ere, -ui, -utum)clear up a problem: solvo (-ere, -vi, -utum)discern: discernere (-ere, -crevi, -cretum)firmness of purpose: obstinatio (-onis, f.); pertinacia (-ae, f.)