Volans for flying (as a participle).
Volare - to fly.
Porcus is the Latin word for a male pig, but since female pigs are more common, the word sus is the word you will usually find.
Fly, or in the modern sense 'flee'. As in Timoth 6:11 'Homo, fuge'
The Latin equivalent of the English 'flying' is volans. The Latin word is the present participle form of the verb 'volo, volare'. Its literal meaning is 'to fly'. But it loosely is translated as 'to move rapidly, rush'. Its plural form is 'volantes', which means 'birds, flying creatures'.
Depending on how the question is intended, one or more of the following answers may be relevant:1. the word can does not exist in Latin. But canis does exist, whose meaning is "dog" and can in Spanish with the same meaning in Latin.2. the Latin equivalent for the English auxiliary verb "can" is some form of the verb posse, "to be able". For example, "I can fly" is possum volare ("I-am-able to-fly").3. the Latin root "can-" means "sing" and shows up in such words as canere or cantare "to sing", cantio "singing", cantus "song; chan
Musca, Muscae, Feminine -> a fly Also, Fugo, fugare, fugavi, fugatum - to fly It can also mean things like banish. It can mean to chase or drive something out. It can also mean to make uneasy (discomfit).
Volare - to fly.
musca domestica
Tipula simplex.
(Drosophila melanogaster) Fruit fly.
Drosophila melanogaster
Volet.
in it's turm{DO PIGS REALLY FLY}?it really means that in your mind that somethin is going on in your mind!
latin
Drosophila melanogaster
Possum volare si conor.
It is called Dionaea muscipula.
A Bill Gates' flower fly is a species of flower fly native to Costa Rica, Latin name Eristalis gatesi.