Polyribosomes (or polysomes) also known as ergosomes are a cluster of ribosomes, bound to a mRNA molecule.Polyribosomes read one strand of mRNA simultaneously, helping to synthesize the same protein at different spots on the mRNA, mRNA being the "messenger" in the process of protein synthesis. They may appear as clusters, linear arrays, or rosettes in routine: this is aided by the fact that mRNA is able to be twisted into a circular formation, creating a cycle of rapid ribosome recycling, and utilization of ribosomes. 5' 7-methylguanosine cap and 3' polyA tail aids in this process
They are found in the center of the cell, inside the nucleus
The genetic material of a virus is found in the capsid.
The chromosomes are found in the nucleus.
Fibrous joint found in tooth
They are found inside a chloroplast.
Stratus means "paved, spread out", and nimbus means "cloud, storm", so the compound would mean something like "spread out like a cloud", or "spread out by means of a cloud", or perhaps something else-on the face of it, it doesn't have a very clear, precise meaning. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found.
Spirare, root spira-, means "to breathe". Spiritus, root spiritu-, means "breath". Anima/animus used to mean something like breath(ing) too, where anima is the breath of life, the soul, and animus the breath of emotions and the will; Greek anemos, "wind", is related. Then there is flere, root fle- meaning "to blow". Derived from this are inflation and conflation. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found.
I can think of boon and bona fide. Related (but derived from a parallel word in Latin, bene, meaning "well") are benefit, beneficial, benediction... No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found.
I'm not sure what the Romans actually used and whether they had an exact word for dessert, but I would probably use something like "sweet" or "delicious": dulcia "sweet things", or dulce "something sweet", or deliciae "delectable things". No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found.
You would usually use either son or daughter here: "filius/filia maris". If you must use a literal translation, it would have to be infans, but that sounds a bit odd. You could use seed of the sea, "satus/sata/satum maris", where -us is masculine, -a feminine, -um neuter. This would be a natural metaphor is Latin. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found.
We need more context, but this is what it could mean in certain contexts: "(There is) nothing else in us." No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found.
It means "medicine" in all senses (pill/potion and profession), but it could also occasionally mean a poison. See Lewis and Short for further reference. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found.
We need more context to give you a good answer. A few options: Liber Visus, "Book of Seeing"; Liber Visorum, "Book of Things (or people) Seen"; Liber de Visis, "Book about Things (or people) Seen"; Liber Videndorum, "Book of Things (or people) to be Seen". No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found.
Depends on what you're rearing. Rearing children would be educare or educere. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found.
"They like you (plural)". It sounds a bit odd out of context. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found.
That would be "Regina Noctis", from "regina" and "nox". Noctis is the genitive of "nox", so "of (the) night". No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found.
I do not believe this is a correct Latin word. It could be a misspelling of "egistis", meaning "you (plural) have done/acted/etc.". No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found.