The Latin phrase 'Circ vlvs orbe dttior in 1010 non alter' contains misspellings. The words 'circ' and vlvs' most likely need to be combined into 'circulus'. The word 'dttior' needs to be spelled 'ditior'. And the numbers '1010' need to be written 'loco'. The word-by-word translation of the corrected phrase is the following: 'circulus' means 'circle'; 'orbe' means 'orbit, ring'; 'ditior' means 'more profitable, richer'; 'in' means 'in'; 'loco' means 'place'; 'non' means 'not'; and 'alter' means 'another, other'. Therefore, the English meaning is as follows: A more[nearly] perfect circle [is found] in no other place[than a] ring.
The prefix is actually "circ-" means "around."
need help
Circ-|Circle|Circus|Large public entertainment in a CIRCULAR ArenaI'm Really Sure That This is The Definition.
Exactly as in the question 1010 but if you mean in Roman numerals it is MX
10 in decimal
MX = 1010
16518- P0134 O2 Sensor Circ.,Bank1-Sensor1 No Activity Detected 16519- P0135 O2 Sensor Heater Circ.,Bank1-Sensor1 Malfunction
The same as it means elsewhere: alter = change.
Oh, dude, half of 1010 is like 505. I mean, it's pretty straightforward math, right? You just divide 1010 by 2 and boom, you get 505. It's like cutting a pizza in half, except with numbers.
Well, you could alter your beliefs and find Jesus. You could alter your opinions about Eastern religions.
Ali, Allo, and Alter all mean other. Example words are alter ego, alias, and altruism I don't know if its Greek or Latin in origin.
This question is not clear. Do you mean you need to alter the date of a letter that you have already sent?