Vox, vocis
"The friends and the voice" translates to amici et vox in Latin.
no shakira is not latin but she is spanish but her voice is great
'Vox' is the Latin equivalent of 'voice'. According to the classical Latin of the ancient Romans, it's pronounced wohks. According to liturgical Latin, it's pronounced vawks.
Latin Vox
The English equivalent of the Latin phrase 'vox media' is the following: middle voice. The term refers to an option that's available in the earlier, ancient, classical Greek language. For the 'middle voice' refers to a construction that's neither in the active voice nor in the passive. That 'voice' doesn't exist in ancient, classical Latin. But Latin speakers and writers drew on the classical Greek heritage in historical, investigative and literary writing. They therefore knew of, and understood, the middle voice's existence and use.
Loquo is the Latin root that means voice Eg: Loquacity
Vox is the Latin equivalent of the French 'voix'. The Latin word is a feminine gender noun that means 'voice, word'. It's pronounced 'wohks' in classical Latin, and 'vawks' in liturgical Latin.
Vox = voice so i think it could be Voces
big, great, large, loud (voice, laugh)
Call or voice is the English equivalent of the Latin root syllable 'voc'-. Examples of Latin derivatives of the Latin root are the adjective 'vocalis', and the feminine gender noun 'vocatio'. Examples of English derivatives are the Latin equivalents, in 'vocal' and 'vocation'.
The Latin word for "phone" is "telephonium," derived from Greek roots meaning "distant voice." However, since the concept of a telephone did not exist in ancient Rome, the term is a modern adaptation. In classical Latin, related terms like "vox" (voice) or "sonus" (sound) might be used to convey related meanings.
e·le·gan·te ; the relevant link below has a voice key .