There is no single word for sunny day. You would use dies, which means day and apricus which means sunny. So sunny day in Latin would be dies apricus, the adjective folowing the noun.
a suuny day
sunny is an adjective for colors
Suuny leone
dillagi and apne
There isn't one, it's just called Caerleon
The was not an ancient Roman word for date. The Romans were Latins and spoke Latin. The Latin did not have a word for date meaning a point of time. They used deis (day) and said on the day XXX. Basilnus was a date, acorn aor chestnut. It could refer to nuts in general. Caroete was a nut-shaped date.
The Roman word for werewolf is lycanthrope
The present day city of Moscow was not a part of the Roman empire.The present day city of Moscow was not a part of the Roman empire.The present day city of Moscow was not a part of the Roman empire.The present day city of Moscow was not a part of the Roman empire.The present day city of Moscow was not a part of the Roman empire.The present day city of Moscow was not a part of the Roman empire.The present day city of Moscow was not a part of the Roman empire.The present day city of Moscow was not a part of the Roman empire.The present day city of Moscow was not a part of the Roman empire.
The Roman word for dinner is "cena."
Since latin word for water is aqua then the modern roman would spell it out as acqua.
The letter 'K' was very rare in Latin, but one common word was Kalendae, the name for the first day of any month (e.g., Kalendae Aprilis, "the first day of April").
Roman is not a language.