The Latin word for thumb is "pollex" you can also use "digitus".
The Latin word for thumb is "pollex" you can also use "digitus".
The Latin word for thumb is "pollex" you can also use "digitus".
The Latin word for thumb is "pollex" you can also use "digitus".
The Latin word for thumb is "pollex" you can also use "digitus".
The Latin word for thumb is "pollex" you can also use "digitus".
The Latin word for thumb is "pollex" you can also use "digitus".
The Latin word for thumb is "pollex" you can also use "digitus".
The Latin word for thumb is "pollex" you can also use "digitus".
The Latin word for thumb is "pollex" you can also use "digitus".
This is an urban legend. There was no such law. The phrase "rule of thumb" comes, rather, from the time-honored practice of using the thumb to make rough measurements (think "rule" as in "ruler"). In some languages, in fact, the word for "inch" is the same as the word for "thumb" (e.g., French pouce) or is derived from it (e.g. Spanish plugada, from pulgar).
The Latin word for ice is "glacies".
Yes, because "Roman" is a proper adjective, a "name word" and the adjective must agree with it's noun, in this case the word Emperor, which is also a name word.
Welsh comes from the Germanic word 'Walhaz' meaning Roman foreigner. It was a term used to describe Celtic or Latin speaking inhabitants of the Roman Empire.
it is Ferrum and explains why its Fe and not In or something like that.
The French word for thumb is "pouce."
The Maori word for thumb is kōnui.
Angur is the Roman Hindi word for grape. Achanak is a Hindi word with 2 meanings; out of nowhere, and sudden.
No, "pouce" is the French word for thumb. "Pollice" is not a French word.
thumb tack already is an English word.
The Latin word for "thumb" is pollex (-icis, m.).
thumb nail, thumb tack, thumb screw, thumb print
CCDL
XVII
IV
XIII
The Roman numnmber for 14 is