Unus
Unus.
One is unus (oo-nus) in Latin.
In Latin, it is " Unus ". In Greek, it is " Ένα ".
Viginti et unus.
The affix in the word uniform(s) is uni- which is in Latin unus, una and unum. Unus, una and unum means one in Latin! Uni- means one/singular.
The Latin equivalent of the English word 'one' is unus, if there's one of a male gender noun. The form is 'una', in the case of female gender; and 'unum', in the case of neuter. The root syllable for the English derivatives is uni-. For example, the word 'unicorn' means 'one ['unus'] horn ['cornus'].
un is a Latin word that means not :)
latin unus, means one
In+a noun in the ablative case
The word "unique" comes from the Latin language. It is derived from the Latin word "unus," meaning "one."
In latin, unus = onecornu = hornonehorn = unuscornu = unicorn