The Latin equivalent of the English phrase 'charm caster' is iaculator carminis. In the word-by-word translation, the noun 'iaculator' comes from the verb 'iacere', which may mean 'to let fall in speaking, or to throw'. The noun 'carminis' is in the genitive of possession form of 'carmen', which means 'magic formula, or song'.
That would be lumos which means light in latin
The Charm to summon any object directly to the caster is Accio.
It is the seize and pull charm. It pulls objects towards the caster.
You use the summoning charm. You say Accio then the object. For example 'Accio Book'
Venus means "charm" in archaic Latin.
carmen, carminis, n. - song, chant, incantation, charm
The name-endings indicate that it was once a fort - is a corruption of the Latin word Castra (fortified camp).
The spell Specialis Revelio is a charm that reveals the hidden properties of an object. It can uncover enchantments or spells placed on an item, allowing the caster to better understand its magical nature.
The "caster" part of many English place names is a left over from the occupation of Britain by the Roman Empire, which lasted for about 500 years from around AD 50. The Romans named, or re-named places and the "caster" derives from the Latin word Castra which means a camp or settlement. See the related question link below.
It came from the French 'delit' which, in turn came from the Latin 'delectare' which means to charm.
Steering caster,a caster wheel which can swivel. And change direction in any way.
Rich Caster's birth name is Richard C. Caster.