Tela.
weapons
"Weapons are an issue"
Latin has no such word. There is a first declension verb intento, which means "I point at, point (weapons etc) in a threatening manner, or threaten".
It comes from the Latin word armatura, equipment, which comes from arma, weapons or tools.
The Latin equivalent of the English word 'fighter' is pugnator. It derives from the Latin noun 'pugna', which means 'fight'. The Latin word may refer to a fighter who uses body parts or weapons in the fight. Likewise, the Latin word also may refer to a fight in which body parts or weapons are used. The scale may range from a one-on-one street fight all the way up to a wartime fight on a battlefield.
No. Mexico is signatory of the Treaty of Tlatelolco, which bans nuclear weapons in Latin America and the Caribbean.
As much as Tomahawks (the war hatchet, not the missile) are still used in the United States.Such weapons were used hundreds of years ago; nowadays these are shown only for representation purposes. These days, all armies in Latin America use modern weapons, like the AK-47, the Beretta ARX 160 or the M2 Browning.
No. Nicaragua is signatory of the Treaty of Tlatelolco, banning any nuclear weapons in Latin America. It also does not have any nuclear power plants.
The English word "magazine" meant, originally, an armory: a place where weapons are stored. The Latin word for "magazine" in this sense is entheca (-ae, f.).Classical Latin does not have a word for "magazine" as a publication (the Romans might have thought of such a thing as a liber (libri, m.), "book"). The word periodicum (-i, n.) was coined for use in this sense in modern (post-Renaissance) Latin.
Mexico has two operating nuclear reactors on Laguna Verde, Veracruz with a capacity of 683 GW each. As host, founder and signatory country of the Treaty of Tlatelolco - which established Latin America and the Caribbean to be a nuclear weapons free zone - Mexico also has some nuclear research laboratories, but all are focused on civil applications and are supervised by the Agency for the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons in Latin America and the Caribbean (OPANAL), based in Mexico City. Thus, Mexico does not have any nuclear weapons.
Nuclear weapons weapons of mass destruction, biological weapons.
Mexico is capable of producing Nuclear power, it currently only has one power station called Laguna Verde Nuclear Power Station, located in Veracruz. Mexico might be capable of producing nuclear weapons, but they have laws against nuclear weapons, they are not allowed on Mexican soil. If Mexico were to produce nuclear weapons, their friendship with the United States will be ruined, the United States likes controlling Latin-American countries, and if a country such as Mexico has nuclear weapons, they can no longer enslave them.