incredibile
The English word "color" has been relatively unchanged from its Latin roots. The Latin word for color is also "color," and entered into the English language from the Old French "color," from which there also originated the British English spelling of the word.
Probably. The correct spelling is per diem meaning by the day. There is no Latin word or English spelt dium. Probably a spelling error - but there is a Latin word 'dium'. It's an adjective, meaning 'divine, divinely inspired, blessed.'
It is from a Latin word of the same spelling, literally meaning 'elbow. This is related to an Old English word 'eln'.
"Supersede" comes from the Latin word "supersedeo," which is the root of the English spelling. The shift from "cede" to "sede" occurred in the 15th century due to influence from other Latin words and English spelling conventions.
Supersede, from the Latin supersedēre 'to be superior to'. A variant is supercede, but this is disputed because this spelling doesn't follow the word's Latin roots.
Radii is the plural of the word 'radius'. It comes from the Latin word of the same spelling meaning beam, staff or rod. Most European languages derived from Latin.
Incredible is translated to "incroyable" in French.
The English word for the Latin word "portare" is "to carry."
The English word for the Latin word "credere" is "believe."
The English word for the Latin word "cord" is "heart."
Camel is an English word. It is camelus in Latin.
architecture. same spelling.