The word 'trifecta' derives from two words. One is the Latin word tres, which means 'three'. The other is the Latin word factus, which is the past participle of 'facere' ['to do, to make'].
There are actually several Latin translations for the English "success". The nouns "successus" (successful result), "prosperitas" (prosperity), and "secundum" (lucky achievement) are three possibilities.
The Latin equivalent of the English word 'thief' is fur. It's a derivative from the earlier, ancient, classical Greek. From it derive the English adjective 'furtive', the English adverb 'furtively', and the English noun 'furtiveness'.fur
Strangely the modern name Jack derives from Latin Jacobus, which is the Latin version of James. All these names derive from Hebrew Jacob, meaning "one who supplants" - someone who overthrows someone else.
This question has been asked many many many times. Book does not derive from Latin, it derived from German. Mobile comes from the Latin word mobilus (capable of being moved), which in turn came from movere, which means to move.
latin probably
Yes, Latin is considered a Romance language because it is the precursor to the modern Romance languages such as French, Spanish, Italian, Portuguese, and Romanian. These languages evolved from spoken Latin over the centuries.
The Greek goddess Nike was the goddess of victory. The Roman name for Nike was Victoria.
The Latin root "umbr-" comes from the word "umbra," meaning "shade" or "shadow." It is commonly used in English to refer to something dark or obscured.
From the Latin 'caput" meaning 'head'.
I drag, draw, haul, derive, or get.
operation, optional
Dynamic does not derive from Latin. It comes from a Greek word, dunamis, meaning power.
The word legend has a Latin origin. Myth and mythology derive from Greek.
The Latin Word for holiday should be FERIAS. Hope this helps.
Yes, of course. The Romans gave them latin names... Nike is called Victoria.
English is a Germanic language which was near the same area as Latin. We also derive a lot of English words from Latin roots.