In Latin, it is " Unus ".
In Greek, it is " Ένα ".
Triocular isnt a word but trinocular means having 3 points of vision. It could be a camera rig with 3 cameras or a microscope with 2 standard eyepieces and 1 camera eyepiece.
centi comes from the Latin word for 100. In the metric system it means 1/100, as the Latin prefixes mean reciprocal multipliers [1/10, 1/100, 1/1000, etc], and Greek prefixes are the 'normal' multipliers [10, 100, 1000, etc.]
1. catalogue = word, down, completely + Logue
The verb fieri in Latin is used as the passive of facere, which means "to do" or "to make". Fiat is the third-person present subjunctive of fieri and means "let it be made" or "let it be done". It is the word used in the Latin Bible to translate God's creative word "Let there be" in the creation story of Genesis 1.
Electricus is the latin word for electricity I believe; it means amber or amber-like.------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------New/corrected answer:It has evolved into the present usage of "electricity" from the root word electr- .BUT it is from Ancient Greek, not Latin. electr- G ἤλεκτρον. It does mean:1. Amber, amber-colored;2. Electric (modern usage)and also Electric Eel Electrophorus electricusand even Broad-billed Motmot Electron platyrhynchum;
The root word of decimeter is "deci", which comes from the Latin word "decimus" meaning tenth.
The word is taken from Greece. It's origins are from the Medieval Latin word 'decimlis' which means 1 tenth of a whole. This is an evolution of the word (slang word) 'decima' from earlier Latin langauge. The Latin word 'decima', still meaning 1 tenth, is from 'decem', meaning ten of or ten units of measurment, which has Indo-European roots. If you look at the current use of the word 'decimal' you can see it has evolved again. As it now means "Relating to or using powers of ten" (refrence: thefreedictionary.com/decimal)
The word "pound" comes from the Latin word "pondo," meaning "weight." The symbol for the pound unit, lb, comes from the abbreviation "lb" for the Latin word "libra," which also means "weight" or "balance."
1000, of course, as 1000 ×0,01 = 10.Greek "δέκα" means "ten", and Greek prefixes indicate multiples of units; hence 1 dekameter = 10 m. Latin prefixes indicate fractions of units; hence 1 cm (from Latin "centum", meaning "one hundred") contains 0,01 m.Note that 1 decimeter (from Latin "decem", meaning "ten") contains 10 cm, as you can easily verify, after these preliminaries.
Because the term percent means per cent as in the Latin word "for every hundred"
Original answer: "No, the word Rapture is not in the Bible, but it is the word we use for catching away which is found in the bible. It is our descriptive and is valid to use."The word "rapture" is not found anywhere in the EnglishBible, but it is found in the Vulgate, the Latin translation of the Bible, where it is translated from the Greek Word that means "caught up, swept away". That's where the term is found.
1.Nanosecond 2.Nano-bubble 3.Nano-watt