The adjective form for the noun Latin is Latin; Latin language, Latin music, Latin countries.
The English adjective 'primary' comes from primus. The Latin word is an adjective that's in the masculine singular form. It's translated as 'first'.
"Stultus" is one Latin equivalent of the English word "fool."Specifically, the Latin word is a masculine noun. It also represents the masculine form of the adjective "foolish." Latin nouns do not take definite articles ("the"). But the word "unus" is the masculine form of the adjective "a, one."The pronunciation is "stool-toos."
The Latin equivalent of the word 'first' is primus. That's the masculine form of the adjective. Latin words show gender. The feminine form is prima. The neuter form is primum.
Tutto is an Italian equivalent of the Latin word toto.Specifically, the word is the masculine singular form of an adjective/noun. It means "entire, whole". The pronunciation will be "TOOT-to" in Italian and "TO-to" in Latin.
The word great translated into Latin is Magna. However the word great can also be used in noun form as well as an adjective.
The Latin root word for a vertical support is "columna."
"Fortuitus" is the Latin equivalent of "random."Specifically, this word is the masculine singular form of an adjective. The feminine form is "fortuita." The neuter form is "fortuitum." But whatever its gender and whether it be in the singular or plural form, the adjective also may be translated as "accidental, causal, fortuitous."
The word 'maternal' is the adjective form of the noun mater (the Latin noun for 'mother') which is occasionally used in English.
The word "latitude" comes from the Latin word "latitudo", which means "breadth" or "width". It is derived from the word "latus", meaning "wide" or "broad".
The Latin word silo is a form of the adjective silus, which means "pug-nosed".The English word "silo" is from another source entirely. It is not certain which; either it is a modified form of the Latin word sirus, "a pit for storing corn", from Greek siros, or it comes from a pre-Latin Iberian word that is related to Basque zilo.
The English adjective "insular" derived from the Latin word insula, meaning "island."
The adjective form is the word "national".