Ten in Latin
Ten in Latin
Decem. (Dec- is the root that we use in constructing English words.)
Exoticorum libri decem was created in 1605.
The Latin phrase "centurio mercatoribus decem denarios" translates to "the centurion gives the merchants ten denarii" in English. Here, "centurio" refers to a centurion, a Roman officer, "mercatoribus" means merchants, and "decem denarios" indicates the amount of ten denarii, which is a form of currency in ancient Rome.
Deca-, from the Greek deka, is a prefix meaning ten. Decem is the Latin word for ten
Decem.
Decem.
'Vale Decem' by Murray Gold. 'Vale Decem' means 'Farewell Ten'.
decem
December
I believe it can be read as "farewell ten men" Its Latin vale = farewell decem = ten men Clever, Murray Gold!
Decem is a Latin equivalent of the English number "ten." The number "10" receives the numerical representation X. The pronunciation will be "DEH-keng" in classical Latin and "DEY-tchem" in Church Latin.