Maybe Spanish but i don't know because i haven't tried it. But it's a Latin based language so it may be easy.
The English word 'tried' is said in African Abaluhya (Luhya) language as "yatemaa".
The English translation of the Latin phrase 'Impertus imperium expertus' is An issued and tried order. In the word-by-word translation, the past participle 'impertus' means 'issued'. The noun 'imperium' means 'order'. The past participle 'expertus' means 'tried'.
Hadn't happened yet. Even though English is the common language in the USA, but there is no law specifically state that English is THE OFFICIAL language of the country. Many politicians have tried to make it so but none had succeeded yet.
no one is sure. trust me I've tried
"Hold up" is a term developed in English to mean a certain kind of robbery. The Latin for robbery is "roberia." If you tried to translate "hold up" literally into Latin, you would get the word for "to support" or "to sustain," which is "sustinere"
i have no idea at all i don't even know why i tried to answer this question.
Most words in English are of Greek or Roman descent. In fact I tried to write them on this page, but got so tired of writing down ever English word, ( except for words like tarnation, mushroom, crapper, fart, twitter, and frickin,) I fell asleep and my computer shut off. It deleted everything I wrote, so I just wrote this.
I placed the above into a Latin to English translator (http://www.translation-guide.com/free_online_translators.php?from=Latin&to=English)and it came back with:More carry more...It was not sure what Potavi was. So I tried Portavi and that seemed to work. Not so sure there is a literal meaning in English but here goes:More Carry More I Carried
I think the root of the word plumber is the same as the root of the french for the metal lead, "plomb" (which is also pronounced with a silent b) from Latin "plumbum where the b is pronounced! In the 1500's the first dictionary over the English language was published and unfortunately the author (i believe by the name of Anderson) used the Latin alphabet instead of the Celtic to attempt to recreate in writing the pronunciation of words. Unfortunatly because Latin was a language that had few phonemes (sound bites) and English many phonemes. You see it is difficult to write a word in a language that uses many more types of sounds than in the language you are using to write with. It is a little like trying to paint a rain bow when you only have 3 colors in your paint box white, black, and red. Anderson tried his best to duplicate the intricacies of the English language and so had to use a lot of letters that really are not or almost not pronounced.
i have tried translating these words into English using the google language interpretation programme , but with no success .where did these words originate from ?
Many cultures have tried to exclude English to preserve more of their heritage. So long as the United States or another English-speaking country remains prominent globally, English will continue to increase in usage. Currently, English is third, behind only Spanish and Mandarin Chinese, and the number of speakers is growing at a very fast rate, while the number of Mandarin Chinese speakers is beginning to stagnate. This, coupled with United States military power in the twentieth century that set conventions for technology mean that it will likely not die as the dominant language for a long time, just as Greek and Latin were when their respective empires ruled.