Aestas -atis, is not a person; it is the season Summer.
aestas horribilis
The Latin names for the four seasons are as follows: Spring is "ver", Summer is "aestas", Autumn is "autumnus", and Winter is "hiems". These names are commonly used in scientific and academic contexts when discussing seasonal changes and phenomena.
Autumn/Fall - autumnus, autumniAll the seasons:Spring - ver, verisSummer - aestas, aestatisAutumn/Fall - autumnus, autumniWinter - hiem(p)s, hiemis
# English - summer # Dutch - de zomer # French - été # German - sommer # Greek - καλοκαίρι # Italian - estate # Portuguese - verão # Russian - лето # Spanish - verano # Japanese - kyuuka # Danish - sommer # Finnish - '''kesä''' # Latin - aestas estas # Afrikaans - somer #
Aestus is a word that means basically "undulation; boiling" and is applied in Latin to various things that are perceived to move in this manner:heat or firethe swell of the seathe tidesfiguratively, passion or uncertainty of mindThe Epicurean poet/philosopher Lucretius used aestus to refer to the flux of atoms that he believed was the cause of sense perception.The similarly-spelled word aestas means "Summer".
Siete is an Italian equivalent of the Latin word estis. The verb in question serves as the second person informal plural of the present indicative, with the English meaning of "You are." The respective pronunciations will be "SYEY-tey" in Italian and "eh-stihs" in Latin.
ambulo - to walk, travel, or march bellicum - the signal for a march or attack decedo - to march away efferre signa - to march out erigo - to march up degredior - to march down signa ferre - to march agmen - an army on the march agminis - armies on the march Martius - the month of march