With a motive other than the ostensible and proper one.
Insight in Italian is Intuito.
Morire alio die MORIRE=die (imperative, 2nd person singular) Moriatur alio die MORIATUR=Let he/she die (3rd person singular, present subjunctive) ALIO=on another DIE=day
rivet ravine right before you go inside the cavern, turn to the right, go across the bridge and that's were alio is. (but you do have to finish the game first though...)
Rivet Ravine Area 2
a nice person: A nice alio <------ Latin =D
you find it in rivet ravine in the area right of the mine entrace
Intuito and intuizione are Italian equivalents of the English word "intuition."Specifically, the masculine noun intuito means "intuition" in the sense of perspicaciousness. The feminine noun intuizione translates as "intuition" in terms of "direct perception, eureka moment." The respective pronunciations will be "een-TOO-ee-to" and "een-TOO-ee-TSYO-ney" in Italian.
The Latin word for insight is the word intuitu. The Spanish word for insight is perspicacia and in Italian is intuito.
Ielvo oyu Pronaced~ I ell-vo ( like elbow but ellvo) yoy
rivet ravine just before you go in the cavern there in a bridge just to the right a small bit down. you have to finish the main story line first though.
The root word "valent" is referring to the valence of an atom or ion. The prefix "alio" means different. Two aliovalent ions are ions that have a different valence. In other words they don't have the same number of valence electrons. The converse of this word would be "isovalent", meaning that the two ions are of the same valence.
Christian Emunds has written: 'Solvendo quisque pro alio liberat eum' -- subject(s): Third parties (Roman law), Performance (Law), Debtor and creditor (Roman law)