The Latin prefix 'unus' means one or whole and the Latin suffix, 'versus' means turn.
Mean
The haudensaunee mean irguios
MEAN ignoble - being mean signify - mean
R mean reastate the question. A mean answer it. F mean for example. F mean for example. T mean this show that. RAFFT that what it mean in Ela
Unus is "one".
It means one/single.
You can either say Unus Multorum or Unus de multis. they both mean the same but the second one gives a stronger connection to the "of many"
Unus the Untouchable was created in 1964.
This looks like an unsuccessful try at translating "One of God's children" into Latin. A more correct version would be Unus de liberis Dei.
CONJECTVS VNVS, NEX VNVS or in a modern representation: CONJECTUS UNUS, NEX UNUS
It's actually two or three words: viginti unus, viginti et unus, and unus et viginti all occur. Unus changes form to agree with the things you're counting: feminine viginti una; neuter viginti unum.
The Latin equivalent of the English word 'one' is unus, if there's one of a male gender noun. The form is 'una', in the case of female gender; and 'unum', in the case of neuter. The root syllable for the English derivatives is uni-. For example, the word 'unicorn' means 'one ['unus'] horn ['cornus'].
yes
One is the English equivalent of 'unus'. It also may be translated as a, an. Another of its indefinite uses is in its translation as anyone, someone.
One is scarcely enough is the English equivalent of 'Unus vix satis'. In the word by word translation, the word 'unus' means 'one'. The adverb 'vix' means 'hardly, scarcely'. The adjective 'satis' means 'enough'.
Unus