You are hungry = Esuris
'hambre' = 'hunger' (tengo hambre (lit. 'I have hunger') = I am hungry) 'Hambre' derives from Vulgar Latin 'Famen, faminis', Latin 'fames' There are good simple, longer etymologies on 'wiktionary' and 'fornerds.org'
A plane flies but never gets hungry.
A hungry clock goes back four seconds.
Vac is Latin
You are hungry = Esuris
Hunger translates to fames in Latin. An example in a Latin sentence; Erat autem fames in re Paulo post, decanus. In English it translates to; It was hunger that later returned Paul to reality.
That would be imperium (-i, n. ), "the power to command."
Asia and the Pacific, which is home to 578 million of the world's hungry, compared to 239 million in Sub-Saharan Africa and 53 million in Latin America and the Caribbean.
am is a be verb. The present be verbs are: am -- I am hungry is -- He is hungry. She is hungry. It is hungry are -- They are hungry. We are hungry. You are hungry. The past be verbs are: was -- I/he/she/it was hungry were -- They/we/you were hungry.
present - am / is / are - I am hungry. She is hungry. They are hungry. We are hungrypast - was / were - I was hungry. He was hungry. They were hungry. We were hungrypast participle - been - I have been hungry. She has been hungry. They have been hungry
No you are not hungry.
hungry hungry
'hambre' = 'hunger' (tengo hambre (lit. 'I have hunger') = I am hungry) 'Hambre' derives from Vulgar Latin 'Famen, faminis', Latin 'fames' There are good simple, longer etymologies on 'wiktionary' and 'fornerds.org'
as hungry as a louce
I am hungry
it defines if you are hungry or not , if you hungry you can eat and because your hungry