In Latin, the word for sun is "sol." This root appears in various English words, such as "solar" (related to the sun) and "solstice" (the time when the sun reaches its highest or lowest point in the sky). The term "sol" is also associated with light and warmth, reflecting the sun's vital role in life and nature.
If you mean circumference of a circle then that is its Latin roots
Man.
The word for sun is 'sol'. The word has its roots in Latin, the traditional language of the Popes.
Solar means "about the Sun" in Latin. The Latin word for "Sun" is "Sol".
Fluere - to flow
it means like annually
"Calorie" is not a Latin word, though it has Latin roots: it is from the word calor, meaning "heat."
The Latin and Greek words Sol and Helios, respectively, are essentially the roots of the development of our name for the Sun.
mob, mot, or mov all are to move from Latin (mobilis, movere, motus) migr is a person who moves ambul is to walk or move about fer is to carry kine is motion
Latin for Sun
"decir" is spanish and means "say" or "tell" I suppose that it´s silimar in latin,because spanish has latin roots...
Sunshine is not a Latin word. The word in Latin for sun is: sol. ( a masculine 3rd declension noun) There are various ways in which to express light and the sun, but no single word for sunshine.