As a verb "I bring", "I wear". As a noun:
Dative singular of the second declination "portum", porto (To the port, for the port)
ablative singular of the second declination: porto (with the port, through the port)
"Porto" in Latin means "I carry" or "I bear."
Portus.
The root "port" is a Latin root. It comes from the Latin word "portare," which means "to carry."
"Porto" in Portuguese is pronounced the same as in English, with the stress on the first syllable.
Calor is the Latin word for "heat".
"Habesne" is Latin for "do you have?" or "have you?" It is a question that is commonly used in Latin to inquire about possession or ownership of something.
The root "discipulus" means "student" in Latin.
The Latin word for "carry" is "porto".
Porto Calé.
porto, portare: to carry
Horse
portable portal import export
I carry.
Horse
The root "port" is a Latin root. It comes from the Latin word "portare," which means "to carry."
The Latin root word of port means to break something up. So to explain in a little sentence it would mean:Break something up.
All that is mine, I carry with me.
Port, from the Latin porto, means "to carry."Then able, so put together ---> "able to carry."
Carlo Porto's birth name is Carlyle Oliveira Porto.