Cyclospora is found in foods that are contaminated with feces.
Until recently, Cyclospora was considered to be a form of algae
Food poisoning can be caused by either bacteria, such as Salmonella or E. coli, or viruses, such as norovirus or hepatitis A. Both can contaminate food during preparation, processing, or handling, leading to illness when consumed. Symptoms of food poisoning typically include nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, and abdominal pain.
it was found by people it was found by people
Zinc is found with copper and is also found with gold and nickel.
The ozone is found in atmosphere. It is also found in troposphere.
Until recently, Cyclospora was considered to be a form of algae
Cyclospora is a spore-forming protozoan. It is linked to food contaminated with feces, and if ingested, it can cause a cyclospora infection, or cyclosporiasis, which includes flu-like symptoms within a week after ingestion.
Cyclospora
Coccidia
You get it by drinking water or eating food that's been contaminated by an infected person. No one knows exactly how cyclospora is transmitted. A person infected with cyclospora passes the parasite in stool. However, unlike some other foodborne parasites, cyclospora doesn't become infectious until days or weeks after it's passed in a bowel movement.
Food poisoning can be caused by either bacteria, such as Salmonella or E. coli, or viruses, such as norovirus or hepatitis A. Both can contaminate food during preparation, processing, or handling, leading to illness when consumed. Symptoms of food poisoning typically include nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, and abdominal pain.
Stratus means "paved, spread out", and nimbus means "cloud, storm", so the compound would mean something like "spread out like a cloud", or "spread out by means of a cloud", or perhaps something else-on the face of it, it doesn't have a very clear, precise meaning. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found.
Spirare, root spira-, means "to breathe". Spiritus, root spiritu-, means "breath". Anima/animus used to mean something like breath(ing) too, where anima is the breath of life, the soul, and animus the breath of emotions and the will; Greek anemos, "wind", is related. Then there is flere, root fle- meaning "to blow". Derived from this are inflation and conflation. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found.
I can think of boon and bona fide. Related (but derived from a parallel word in Latin, bene, meaning "well") are benefit, beneficial, benediction... No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found.
I'm not sure what the Romans actually used and whether they had an exact word for dessert, but I would probably use something like "sweet" or "delicious": dulcia "sweet things", or dulce "something sweet", or deliciae "delectable things". No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found.
You would usually use either son or daughter here: "filius/filia maris". If you must use a literal translation, it would have to be infans, but that sounds a bit odd. You could use seed of the sea, "satus/sata/satum maris", where -us is masculine, -a feminine, -um neuter. This would be a natural metaphor is Latin. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found.
We need more context, but this is what it could mean in certain contexts: "(There is) nothing else in us." No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found. No matching link found.