Because a Latin personal endings provide a subject for the verb.
In linguistics it appears to come from the Latin word "Docere" - to teach. This may be only part of what you require answered.
The Latin word 'an' is a conjunction. It's a coordinating conjunction that connects sentences, clauses, phrases, or words. It may be translated as 'or' or 'whether'.
Pulchra mens [est] pulcher animus. (The word for "is", est, is optional in such sentences in Latin.)
The English word for the Latin word "solus" is "alone" or "only".
Interplanetary travel for humans will require an equipment upgrade.
Hmm... there isn't any (at least in this way). Latin sentences are written without any latin equivalent to "the". Another example... you would write he/she/it comes... in latin it's simply venit...
Act, do, Latin, activity - something that a person does; react - to do something in of how to write words in sentences; telegram - a message sent by telegraph.
qu is the only 2 letter latin word
There is no word for spider in latin. Only a particular species are named in latin.
The Latin word "unicus" means one and only, sole, unique
Requiem is the latin word for asking, it is also the root word for request which is asking for something and for require which is a mandatory asking.
It means walrus. My Latin teacher has a crazy obsession with walruses so he felt the need to tell us. It's often used in the sentences we translate.