"Motus (moved)", perfect participle passive of "movere (to move)".
Reason comes from French 'raison', itself from the Latin 'ratio'
The Latin word 'an' is a conjunction. It's a coordinating conjunction that connects sentences, clauses, phrases, or words. It may be translated as 'or' or 'whether'.
The police are trying to find the motive of the murder.Money is my main motive.
a motive is something a criminal has
The Latin verb "sentio, sentire, sensi, sensum," corresponds to the English verbs "feel, perceive," with the idea of physical or mental perception. The Latin verb can also carry the meaning of "to have an opinion" or "feel an emotion."
The definition of the word motive is to move or an inner drive impulse.
The word L-O-V-E came from latin, the word amo. Love is an emotion. Don't get it confused with attachment. These are completely different!
above adv supra; from ~ desuper; over and ~ insuper • prep supra ( acc ); ( motive ) super ( acc ); ( rest ) super ( abl ); be ~ ( conduct ) indignari.
no emotion
Yes: What motive do I have to answer this question?
"Motive" is a noun (of the idea-type category).
Beware is she brings you a gift, her motive is revenge.