"I want a gummy duckling."
Is this what eats gummy worms?
it means flight
Volo is not an English word, but there are 2 words Volo, in Latin. The First is an intransitive verb, Volo, -are, -avi, -atum means to speed or fly. The Second is transitive, Volo, Velle, Volui, which means to wish or want, be willing or purpose. I'm sure the European Romance Languages have very similar words and meanings from these roots.
Volo is latin for wish, If that helps
I want to lead her into the city with me.
In Latin volo is flight.It could mean in flight, but out of context, it's hard to be sure.
Volo is an irregular verb that means 'to wish, to want, to will, to ordain, to suppose, to maintain that, to be willing, or to desire.' Alternatively, volo (with a macron over the second o) is the first person present indicative of volare, which means 'to fly, to speed, or to move rapidly'; volare conjugated as volo would make it mean 'I fly, I speed, or I move rapidly.'
No soy tacaño (a) / malévolo (a)/ cruel / cicatero (a)
But I wish to see a bear that leaps
"Visne" means "Do you want to?" (from velle, to want: volo, vis, vult, volumus, vultis, volunt). More loosely, it may mean "Can you (please)?"
Depends. If you mean the helping verb, there isn't one. There is an ending on verbs in Latin that will say if it is future, past, or present. if you mean the noun, it is animus (which means spirit) or volo
This is the bogus Latin produced by a certain translation site that will remain nameless, which translates English words into Latin one by one without any concern for how they relate to each other grammatically (and, in some cases, without regard for what they actually mean). This is what you get when you feed it the English sentence "No we do not want you", but it actually means "I do not produce us at all; I do not want you [plural]".
Musca, Muscae, Feminine -> a fly Also, Fugo, fugare, fugavi, fugatum - to fly It can also mean things like banish. It can mean to chase or drive something out. It can also mean to make uneasy (discomfit).