Replica comes from replicare, ‘to reply’ or 'to repeat' in Italian.
Europe
Why can't you just replicate the answer in the cerebral cortex and create enough energy to cause an impulse to travel to your hand and Phalanges So you can pick up your pen and write down this answer. Why can't you just replicate the answer in the cerebral cortex and create enough energy to cause an impulse to travel to your hand and Phalanges So you can pick up your pen and write down this answer.
No. A replica is not an opposite, like a pessimist, but a copy.
It come from the latin word Natas it is also how you get the word prenatal
copy
the word dungaree come form Hindi
barney
The word "replica" comes from Latin, specifically from the word "replicare" meaning "to fold back or repeat." It entered the English language in the early 19th century.
Spain or Italy it sort of comes from both,
A replica is an exact copy of something. The word can be used in a sentence like the artist created a replica of the Statue of David.
Italy
All replica coins sold in the USA are required to be marked with the word "COPY" in a conspicuous location on the coin. If a replica does not have the word "COPY", then it is a counterfeit.
replica or duplicate
Replica coins are required to have the word "COPY" stamped on them somewhere.
An Exact copy
The answer is no. And, to the person who answered before me... Shadow is not a replica of Sonic. Look up the word "replica" and you'll see why.
Replica is an Italian, not a Spanish, word. It operates as a noun and verb thanks to its origins in the Latin verb replicare ("to make an exact copy"). The pronunciation will be "REH-plee-ka" in Italian.
Replica Replica was created on 2006-10-21.