The Latin word for store is "recondo" which is also the word for put away or lay up. Many of the root words used in English today come from the Latin language.
Latine and Greece
latin, buteo regalis.
latine
Adam Littleton has written: 'Adam Littleton's Latine dictionary' 'A Latine dictionary in four parts'
You spell it doigt and you say it "doo-a". Forget the g and the t; they are a remain of the latine digitus.
Contact between countries was difficult
Illud Latine Dicere Non Potes.
how do u say kiss in latine
Ikumbe is the Kikuyu word for the English word store.
Cammillo Zampieri has written: 'Poesie latine e italiane'
Please help me wit this😂
The sentence 'Quidquid latine dictum sit altum viditur' contains a misspelling. For the word 'quidquid' is the subject, and therefore needs to be written 'quisquis'. The corrected phrase, 'Quisquis latine dictum sit altum viditur', means Whatever is said in Latin is seen [to be] noble.In the word-by-word translation, the relative pronoun 'quisquis' means 'whoever, whatever'. The adverb 'latine' means 'in Latin'. The adjective/past participle 'dictum' means 'said'. The verb 'sit' means '[he/she/it] is'. The adjective 'altum' means 'high'. The verb 'viditur' means '[he/she/it] is being seen'.A note from another reader: quidquid actually is correct. The original responder is right that quisquis is nominative, and that it means whoever, but quidquid is the NEUTER nominative, and it corresponds with the neuter altum. The sentence is fine. It does indeed mean "it seems high/noble, that thing having been said in Latin," or more understandably, "whatever is said in Latin seems noble." "sit" is subjunctive in an indirect question because of quidquid, if that helps at all.