Pretty much anything that has anything to do with sight that includes the letters 'vis'.
Videre.
Videre.
The English word for "videt" is "sees." It is derived from Latin, where "videt" is the third person singular form of the verb "videre," meaning "to see."
Visible. The third principal part of 'video, videre' is 'visi'.
The latin for "I see" is, believe it or not, video. The infinitive is videre.
He/she/it sees. (pres act ind 3 sg of video, videre)
The root word for "vista" is "videre," which is Latin for "to see."
No, it's just a joke on the name of the Visa brand credit card.The English word Visa comes from the French verb viserwhich came from the Latin verb videre. And, incidentally, the Latin verb videre is the infinitive form of vidi.
From the Latin word 'videre' meaning "to see". It has the same root as the word 'vision'. Videre is from the PIE base 'weid' meaning "to know, to see".
Video comes from the Latin word videre, meaning To see.
The Latin translation of the words word vision is visus est sermo. These words are said in Italian as visione parola.
One Latin eqivalent of the English phrase 'See you soon' is the following: Videbo te mox; or Videbo vos mox. The word-by-word translation is as follows: 'videbo' means '[I] will see'; 'te' means 'you [singular]'; 'vos' means 'you all'; and 'mox' means 'soon'. Another Latin equivalent is the following: Spero te videre mox; or Spero vos videre mox. The word-by-word translation is as follows: 'spero' means '[I] hope'; 'videre' means 'to see'.