"thus" is the English word for thus.
Yes, the word 'thus' has Old English origins.
thus, so, like that
The writer of the question has spelled the word "madam" correctly, but misspelled the word "English". (Besides, the word "you" in the same question is better exchanged for "one" in order to make sane use of the English language. Thus, "How does one spell 'madam' in English?".)
The English word 'thus' may be translated into Latin by one of two words. One word is ita, which means 'in this fashion, so, thus'. Another word is sic, which means 'in this way, so, thus'.
The Spanish word "cinco" translated into English would be "five" or fifth . Thus, for example cinco de Mayo - would translate out to be 'The fifth of may" .
"Then" is an English equivalent of the Italian word allora.Specifically, the Italian word is an adverb. It includes among its meanings "so, then, thus." The pronunciation is "ahl-LOH-rah."
Thus to turn the frugal ones around is the English equivalent of 'Sic volvere parcos'. In the word by word translation, the adverb 'sic' means 'thus'. The infinitive form 'volvere' means 'to turn around'. The adjective 'parcos' means 'frugal'.
I believe the word is you're looking for is spelled Концерт in Cyrillic. Its a English homophone, and thus it means concert.
The word hilariously is not in the English dictionary, however it may be utilized in another language. Thus making your question impossible to answer.
The Latin translation of the English phrase 'And thus courage, daughter' is the following: Et sic filia fortitudinis. The word-by-word translation is as follows: 'et' means 'and'; 'sic' means 'thus'; 'courage' means 'fortitudo'; and 'filia' means 'daughter'. The Latin equivalent is the same whether the English meaning is 'And thus courage, daughter', in the sense of being courageous; or 'And thus [is] courage, daughter', in the sense of explaining what courage in general is all about.
Circa 5th. century Old English æfter "after, next, following in time," from Old English of "off" -ter a comparative suffix; thus originally meaning "more away, farther off."
Tongue is the literal English equivalent of 'linguine'. The word in Italian is formed from the root syllable 'lingu-'. All words that are formed thus relate to 'tongue'.