It doesn't mean anything in Latin, because it's not a Latin word. It's a French word that English found in French's pockets during a mugging; in English it basically means "work applied onto another material".
The Latin word would be applicare.
Applicatus is the Latin equivalent of 'applique'. The word 'applique' refers to a cutout decoration attached to some larger piece of material. The word comes from the past participle of the French infinitive 'appliquer', which means 'to apply'.
applique is pronounced applies in english.
Applique is a French word which we use in English, spelled in French with an accent (appliqué), so it's impossible to translate the English applique into French. If you want to know what applique means (in English), it is the technique of sewing decorations onto fabric. In French its definitions are:to apply [ointment] (sur to); to put [stamp] (sur on);to implement [policy, law];to apply [technique] (à to)
Latin "Aqua" means water in English.
The Latin word opus translated into English mean deed or labor.
It is the Latin word for "road"
mono is not a latin word
The Latin word "vitae" translates to "life" in English.
Erractic from English to Latin is wandering Erractic from Latin to English is erraticus Hope this helped! Panda7Apple
You were.
"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.
if you mean what is the mother of English, it is Latin