Spectare: to watch, to look at, to observe. If you wish to tell someone to watch, use the imperative, which is specta.
observe carefully
Vac is Latin
Ego IS a Latin word. It is the Latin for I.
solus is the latin word for alone ( it is a latin root and can have endings added to it )
from the latin word for circle
The latin word for observe is observare. Observer is the adjective.
observe carefully
To observe, to watch, to look at.
Spect, coming from the Latin word specto meaning watch or observe.
I don't know how to do imperitives, but you watch the sky is: Caelum vides (you=singular). Caelum videtis (you=plural).
Con : To survey, observe + templ: space marked off for augural observation
The Latin root word for "periscope" is "peri" which means "around" or "surrounding", and "scope" which means "to see" or "to watch". So, "periscope" translates to "to see around" or "to observe surroundings".
The word watch isn't of Latin origin. It comes from Anglo-Saxon which got it from Germanic.
Con : To survey, observe + templ: space marked off for augural observation
The Latin verb conspicio means I catch sight of, observe or see. Conspexit would be the third person past perfect - so "he caught sight of, he saw".
To observe is "observar."
Eyes and cameras observe you.