The name William is said the same in Latin as it is in English. This name is of English origin and has been used since the 8th century.
Classical Latin has no word for "William", since the name did not exist in ancient times. "William" was a popular French name in medieval times, which was then used by the Normans. The Normans brought the name to England and it became a common English name by the end of the 12th century. In medieval documents written in Latin, the name William appears as Willelmus.
William Shakespeare. Don't be fooled by the fact that his baptismal register was written in Latin; they just translated his name into Latin for that purpose. His real name was in English.
"Pennsylvania" is from the last name of William Penn, the Latin word for "wooded," sylvanus (an alternative spelling of silvanus), and the common place-name suffix -ia. It's usually explained as meaning "Penn's Woods."
The baptismal record is in Latin and it says "Gulielmus filius Johannes Shakspere", which translated means "William son of John Shakspere"
William King Gillies has written: 'Latin of the Empire' -- subject(s): Latin language, Latin literature, Collections, Readers
Shakespeare did not have a middle name. When you translate it from Latin it is William Shakespeare.
Hermes' Latin name was mercury.
William Ballantine has written: 'Introduction to Latin reading' -- subject(s): Latin language, Grammar, Readers
William Bibby has written: 'Introduction to Latin comprehension' -- subject(s): Composition and exercises, Latin language
the latin name for crocodile is 'crocodilius'!! =P
The Latin name for Butterfly is Papilio(Pa-pil-io) I knw this cuz im in latin and this is my latin name