antiquus vir
__________
senex
EDIT:
*Senex is perfectly fine.
*Antiquus means old, but in the sense of "from an older time". So an antiquus vir might be a ma of the sort of type you do not see anymore. You might describe a historical figure as antiquus. If you want a person who has lived a long time, you would use vetus as your adjective.
The word senior is actually Latin. It means older or - senior.
If you mean 'senior' as in 'an elderly person', then 'senex' means 'old man'. 'anus' is the female equivalent, but it's not polite (synonyms include 'hag' and 'harridan').
viejo (pronounced 'bee-Ekhaw' - stress on the 'E'; 'kh' as in Scottish 'loch') (sorry: misread the question: this is 'old man' in SPANISH)
In Latin, 'veteris hominis' means "the old man."
Anus. Yeah, it's funny. It's pronounced ah-nus.
Vetus -a -um, or antiquus- a um
it mean senex
Anus :D
I'm so glad you asked. "To fart" is pedo, pedere, pepedi, peditum. "A fart" is peditum, -i, n.
pedo viejo
In latin i am is sum
you know ur an old fart when u old! its simple!
Haben Sie Fart!
fart in begali is padu
bibliotheca
Fanny fart is a term for flatulence, or the expulsion of air or gas from the female genitalia. Unfortunately, the term for this in latin has been flagged as vulgarity, and thus cannot be provided in this answer.
The word for "fart" in Tamil is "āŪŠāŪŋāŪĪāŊāŪĪāŊ" (pittu).
No, Santa does not fart and say Ho ho ho. However, Santa does say Ho Ho Ho.
Family was highly valued by the Blackfoot Indians. For traveling, they also split into bands of 20-30 people, but would come together for times of celebration. They valued leadership skills and chose the chiefs who would run their settlements wisely.
The word responsibiliy comes from the Latin word fart