"Superant" means "They Overcome/Conquer"Superant comes from the verb, Supero, which is a 1st Conjugation Verb.Four Principle Parts of Supero:Supero, Superare, Superavi, SuperatusPresent Tense Conjugation of Supero:Singular:1st Person - Supero (I overcome/conquer)2nd Person - Superas (You overcome/conquer)3rd Person - Superat (He, She, It overcomes/conquers)Plural:1st Person - Superamus (We overcome/conquer)2nd Person - Superatis (You [plural] overcome/conquer)3rd Person - Superant (They overcome/conquer)
The English word for the Latin word "portare" is "to carry."
The English word for the Latin word "cord" is "heart."
The English word for the Latin word "credere" is "believe."
Camel is an English word. It is camelus in Latin.
The word latin in the English language would be Latin.
One Latin equivalent to the English word 'conversation' is 'conloquium'. An English derivative of that original Latin word is colloquy. Another Latin equivalent to the English word 'conversation' is 'sermo'. An English derivative of that original Latin word is sermon.
vital, vitality
The Latin word for 'counsel' is 'concilium'. One derivative in English from that original Latin word is conciliary. Another example of an English derivative is reconciliation.
The English word for the Latin word "solus" is "alone" or "only".
The Latin word "vitae" translates to "life" in English.
there is no latin word for mess it an English word