Viri auri ("men of gold").
The Latin word for gold is 'Aurum', which is where the chemical symbol for gold (Au) was derived.
Aurea is like golden , made of gold or adorned with gold. Since the latin word for gold is aurum.
The English word "golden" means made of gold, using the Old English suffix -en to signify the structure of a thing (hence brazen, ashen, wooden, leaden and so on).In Latin the term for gold is aurum, while something golden or made of gold would be aureus.Golden can also be figurative, indicating a colour "like gold", which is flavus in Latin. The same word also means yellow or blonde.Edit: you contacted me to say that you meant the "golden mean", which can refer either to a philosophical idea or to a mathematical ratio. Both of these are Greek in origin, not Latin, and as far as I can tell Latin has no such term. The Greek phrase is:ἄκρος καὶ μέσος λόγος, meaning "extreme and mean ratio", in other words "the golden mean".
An American golden plover is a medium-sized plover, a wading bird which is spotted gold and black on the crown, back and wings, Latin name Pluvialis dominica.
the latin word for gold was aurum and meant 'shining dawn'. hence aureole. Aurora was the goddess of the dawn, which often seems a golden colour.
gold is a metal.while golden means a thing made of gold.
It comes from the Latin name of gold which is aurum.
The Latin equivalent of the English word 'metal' was the following: metallum. But the word wasn't a common choice by writers in ancient, classical Latin. For they instead tended to refer to a metal by its actual name, such as 'aurum' for 'gold' and 'ferrum' for 'iron'.
Aurum - hence the chemical symbol of gold is Au.
It is gold.
The adjective for gold is "golden".
Golden Warrior Gold Lightan was created in 1981.