The word digitus in Latin serves for both fingers and toes; there is no separate word for "toe." If a distinction must be made, toes can be referred to as digiti pedis, just as toes in French are doigts de pied ("digits of the foot").
Just the way it looks: KWAN-toe
The medical root word 'hallux' refers to the great toe (Latin).
Digitus.
The word toe has 1 syllable.The word toe has one syllable.
The word "toe" has a long o sound, as in the word "toe".
Latota Pronounced: la-toe-ta
No, "toe" is not a long o word. The o in "toe" is pronounced as a short vowel sound.
unguis, is (m) -- of a bird. ungula, ae (f) -- of a crab.The Latin equivalent of the English noun 'claw' is unguis. The Latin word is a masculine gender noun that means 'a finger or toe nail' of humans and 'a claw or hoof' of animals. But the Latin equivalent of the claw of a crab or of a nautilus is bracchium, which literally means 'the forearm'.
a toe is translated 'un orteil' (masc.) in French.
toe = manamana wāwae
Tosuto (Toe-sue-toe)
Toes is the plural. The singular form of the word is toe.