Igitur.
Rugby was not played in ancient Rome, therefore there is no Latin word for rugby
The original word was the Latin monarcha, which evolved into the Greek word monárchēs. Therefore, it does have origins in both Latin and Greek.
Australis is the Latin word for southern regions and therefore Australia is the southern land.
The Latin word ergo is equivalent to "therefore" in English language.
Multiplication is a Latin word. Multi means "many", plicate derives from the Latin word plicatus, meaning "fold", and -ation is a Latin-derived suffix meaning "the act or process of"; therefore, multiplication literally translates into Latin as "the act of folding many times".
Fuisse is the perfect verb form of the Latin word sum: to be. Therefore fuisse means had been
In latin the word "terrible" is dino and the word "lizard" is saur therefore thats how you get the word dinosaur.
An exact equivalent or word-by-word translation of the English phrase 'military retainer' into Latin is a bit awkward. Perhaps a better starting-piont is with another equivalent of the English word, in 'adjutant'. The equivalent in Latin therefore is optio.
"Err" is a word that comes from the Latin word errāre. The present infinitive translates "to get lost," "to go astray," "to rove," "to wander" and, therefore, "to wander from the truth" in English. The pronunciation will be "er-RA-rey" in Church and classical Latin.
Costafrom the Latin infinitive accostare, "to adjoin";Costa is the Latin word for "rib", and therefore, "side" and accost is formed from Latin ad-, "to" + costa,Latin costa, "rib, side" (This is actually the source of the word 'coast'). The essential sense is "to be alongside" (like he coast is alongside the beach and sea).
Nitrogen was discovered in 1772, therefore it does not have a canonical Latin form. However, one can Latinize the English name to Nitrogenium.
The noun 'aurum' is the Latin word for 'gold'. The origin of the word is unknown. Likewise unknown therefore is what or whom the word is named for.