multos = many
necant = they kill
"Multos" translates to "many" or "a lot" in English. "Necant" translates to "kill" or "murder" in English.
The Latin word "laborat" translates to "he/she/it works" in English.
"Nescio" is a Latin word that translates to "I do not know" in English.
The Latin word "vocantur" translates to "they are called" in English.
"Solus" is a Latin word that means "alone" or "by oneself" in English.
Are you sure that the word is NAVIGATIERUNT? There is a Latin word NAVIGAVERUNT. In English - "they sailed". (The word "they" may not be necessary in an English translation if the Latin sentence is something like "Nautae navigaverunt" (The sailors sailed), or "Naves navigaverunt" (The ships sailed).)
many
It is Latin, literally translated as "not kill" or don't kill. Necant is the plural present verb of to kill.
Latin "Aqua" means water in English.
The Latin word opus translated into English mean deed or labor.
It is the Latin word for "road"
No, Latin and French are different languages. Latin is an ancient language that was the precursor to various Romance languages, including French. French evolved from Latin and is one of the Romance languages spoken today.
mono is not a latin word
You were.
Erractic from English to Latin is wandering Erractic from Latin to English is erraticus Hope this helped! Panda7Apple
if you mean what is the mother of English, it is Latin
"Latin to English"?? Connect is already English, so you mean the opposite of what you say: English to Latin. The verb "I connect" is connecto, copulo, sero.
Islam is the same word in Latin as it is in English.