lick my butt, but the real answer is...... igneous
Ignis is the latin word for fire, hence the word ignite.
Ignis
in latin: ignis means fire (ignite is derrived from this) and flama means flame
The English word pyre comes from the Latin pyra. A funeral pyre is a pile of wood (or other material that can burn) for burning a dead body. The combining form pyro- can be used to form other words, such as pyrotechnics (fireworks or sensational display) and pyromania (a compulsion to set fires).
got or took
Yes, "form" is derived from the Latin word "forma," which itself is the source of the word in English. However, Latin borrowed "forma" from the Greek word "morphe."
The word "habete" is a Latin imperative form, not English.
The Latin equivalent of the English word 'badge' is insigne. In Latin, it's a neuter gender noun. In the plural, the form is 'insignia'.
"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."
Ignis is the latin word for 'fire'. Often, if you have trouble coming up with meanings of words in Latin, you can guess them by what derives from them. 'Ignis' is responsible for the word 'ignite' in English.
The English word is from a French word, which is from a Latin word.English, in 1297, abbese; from French abbesse; from Latin abbatissa, the feminine form of abbas(English: abbot).
Igneous: these are rocks that solidified directly from molten silicates, which geologists call magma. Examples are: granite, basalt, pumice and flint (which is a form of quartz).