follis. It means fool, but idiot and fool are both the same.
Village idiot is an idiom used by someone that made a mistake, making them feel as if they are the laughing stock in a group or society. Say for instance I do something unintelligible or make a mistake and many people knows about it, then I will say: "I am the village idiot" or "I feel like the village idiot".
To say the word lightning in Latin, a person would say the word "ignis." To say thunder in Latin, the word is "tonitrua."
If you write the Latin out, use a comma and then set "id est" in italics:He was an idiot, id est a bozo.However, that is an unusual way to do it. More common is:He was an idiot, i.e. a bozo.That style of punctuation follows Merriam-Webster and the Chicago Manual of Style.For British English, you will sometimes see these:He was an idiot, ie a bozo.He was an idiot, ie, a bozo.He was an idiot, i.e., a bozo.
Melissa in Pig Latin is: elissamay.
a monster = monstrum
es idiota. es -> you areidiota,-ae -> idiot,-s
"Din idiot" = you idiot "Din" is pronounced like "seen" with a D, But normally Norwegians just say "idiot".
if you want to "you are idiot", you would say "babo ya" or if you want to say just idiot, you would say "babo" source by Korean
spiya
If it's the word "idiot", in Spanish it's said:imbécil, pronounced [imˈbesil] in Latin-America; and [imˈbeθil] in Spainestúpido/estúpida, pronounced [esˈtupiðo / a]
aitasgalva. I looked it up on translate.com
Idiot in Japanese is Baka.
"ะะดะธะพั" (idiot) is how you say idiot in Russian.
"I am an idiot" in French is "Je suis un idiot."
idiotas
Schmuck
Stupid