Argicola, agricolae, feminine, a first declension noun.
Translations: agri, ager
a peasant or a farmer
'Agricola', from which we get the word 'agriculture'.
Villa agricolae translates as "the house of a farmer".
Agricola is not a verb. It is a noun and means farmer.
Equum donaverunt agricolae bonō.
agricola sum, or sum agricola, or ego sum agricola agricola = farmer sum = I am ego = I
An ancient Roman farmer was a farmer, someone who grew things. If you mean the word for farmer, it could be one of three, agricola, arator, or colonus.
Hi, I take Latin at A-Level. Your Latin phrase means "When the farmer and the slave girl were dining."
Agricola (who was also Tacitus's father-in-law)
The prefix of "colonial" is "colon-" which comes from the Latin word "colonus" meaning farmer or settler.
In a combination of Latin and Greek Lupus is Latin for wolf, and although I am unclear on what his name was (it was along the lines of lupus) was the farmer of wolves or something alon the lines of that.