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Q: What is You had seen in Latin?
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What is the word Halloween in Latin?

It is fun to learn the translation for holidays that are celebrated. Halloween translated to Latin is seen as Halloween or Turpis.


What is the Latin word videre in English?

VideoVision (Video, videre, visi, visum)VisionaryEnvisionPretty much anything that has anything to do with sight that includes the letters 'vis'.


Which crop did the Spanish get from Latin America that they have never seen before?

The corn chip.


What the following Latin roots means head?

Latin cap-, seen in caput 'head' and also in English capitulate.


What language used e first as seen lowercase not Greek epsilon?

Mediaeval Latin.


What English words come from the latin word conspicit meaning easily seen?

"conspicuous"


What is 'hiccups' when translated from English to Latin?

Singultūs is a Latin equivalent of the English word "hiccups." The example represents the Latin equivalent in its plural form as the subject of the sentence or as the object of the verb. The pronunciation will be "seen-GOOL-tooss" in Church and classical Latin.


What is the Latin phrase for no problem?

I've seen it translated as "nihil est" which literally means: it is nothing. I've also seen it translated as Bene Habit.


What is the Latin translation for the word aggressive in Latin?

I wasn't 100% sure about the latin verb (from which aggressive has been derived)... aggredior : to go to, approach, address, attack It's part of the deponent verbs (this means more or less that they have a passive declination form... but their meaning is active... i.e. as if "I have been seen" would have the meaning of "I have seen"...).


Which of the root syllables 'mot-' and 'mov-' is Greek and which is Latin?

The root syllable 'mot-' is Latin, while 'mov-' is Greek. For example, 'mot-' is seen in words like "motivate" and "motion," derived from the Latin word "movere" meaning "to move." Conversely, 'mov-' is seen in words like "movement" and "mobile," derived from the Greek word "mobilis," also meaning "to move."


Which language used e as seen first?

The lower case e was introduced in Mediaeval Latin.


Only the dead have seen the end of war in latin?

Mortui soli finem belli viderunt.