Provoke in Latin is either Provocare or Vocare. When I looked at etymonline.com, provoke gave me a connection to Voice. Voice is vocare in Latin. I thought, do Provoke and Voice have anything in common? I found out that Vocare mean "to call" Do they have anything in common? What does provoke have to do with to call?a friend of mine said: maybe you can get provoked by having someone call you? I don't know!
VOCARE AD REGNUM MEANS "to call to the kingdom of"
The Latin word "vocabatis" translates to "you were calling" in English. It is the imperfect tense of the verb "vocare," which means "to call."
Dracones vocare Dracones is the plural form of Draco meaning dragon and vocare is the present infinitive of voco; to summon
Call To War
The Latin root word of "revocation" is "revocare," which means to call back or revoke.
It says Vocare Ad Regnum which is latin for "call to the kingdom"
The root word "voca" comes from the Latin word "vocare," which means "to call" or "to speak." It is commonly seen in words related to voice, communication, and calling.
The root "voke" comes from the Latin word "vocare," meaning "to call." It is commonly used in words related to calling, such as "invoke" (to call upon) and "provoke" (to call forth a reaction).
To be called is one English equivalent of 'vocari'. To be summoned is another equivalent. The Latin verb is the passive infinitive form of the active infinitive 'vocare'.
The Latin root "voc-" appears in such words as vox, "voice", and vocare, "to call". It is derived from a Proto-Indo-European root *wek-, meaning "speak" (the letter 'v' in Latin represents an original 'w' sound).
Voca me translates to call me. Some more information on the sentence: Voca me is the verb vocare in the imperative, which takes a 1st person singular personal pronoun (me) in the accusative.Hope this helps.