It is the Latin word for "road"
iter, itineris, neuterTo travel - facere iter
bon voyage in latin
"iter", Latin for "footpath"
You could say "Habe iter jucundum!" (literally: "Have a pleasant trip/journey!")
The Latin equivalent for the English word 'March', in the sense of the month, is the following: Martius. It's pronounced as MAHR-tee-oos. The Latin equivalent for the English word 'march', in the sense of 'journey', is as follows: iter. It's pronunced as EE-tehr.
The Latin equivalent of the English phrase 'hopeful journey' is the following: iter cum spe. The word 'iter' means 'going, walk, way'; 'journey, march'; 'permission to march, right of way'; 'road, way'; 'course, method, way'. The word 'cum' means 'with'; and 'spei' means 'expectation'; 'hope'; 'anticipation, fear, foreboding'.
Iter is a Latin equivalent of 'journey'. It's a neuter gender noun. In classical and liturgical Latin, it's pronounced 'ee-tehr'.
Journey of life.
Probably the best term would be "iter, itineris" a neuter noun of the third declension; it's where the English adjective "itinerant" come from. You could also use "cursus, us" a masculine noun of the fourth declension, it also means "run" and has the idea of taking a journey in certain contexts.
Latin "Aqua" means water in English.
"Obiter",as in:obiter dictum [something] said by-the-way (ob iter), [incidentally]
The Latin word opus translated into English mean deed or labor.