There are several ways to say person in Latin. The first is homo, meaning being or individual. Then there is persona, which refers to a person's character or personality.
You would say "salvete."
To say "Who am I?" in Latin you can say "quisnam sum Ego?"
How do you say determined in Latin?
my is "mihi" in latin
Run would be currit. That is translated to "He, she, or it runs." If you want it to be first person, it would be curreo. Second person would be curris.
To say bye in Latin you say "Vale" when you are saying bye to one person. To say bye to mare then one person you say "Valete"
To say the word lightning in Latin, a person would say the word "ignis." To say thunder in Latin, the word is "tonitrua."
ille est pulchra
You would say "salvete."
'Vale!' to one person; or 'valete!' to more than one person.
Best Latin term for 'goodbye' was 'vale' (to one person) or 'Valete' (to more than one'.
To say halt in Latin, you would say "siste" if you were speaking to one person, and "sisete" if you were speaking to more than one person.
Navigo is first conjugation Latin, the translation being "I am sailing." Latin verbs come with tense and person indicators, telling you who (I, you, he/she/it, we, you all, they) does it and when.
you say helmet in latin (casco)<- in latin
To say is the English equivalent of the Latin root syllable 'dic-'. That syllable is the source for the Latin infinitive 'dicere', which means 'to say'. Both the Latin root and the Latin infinitive, by way of its older first person present indicative form 'deico', are related to the original Greek 'deiknymi'.
First off, the Romans spoke Latin. In Latin, if you want to say hi to one person you say "salve" (pronounced "sol-way"), but if you want to say hi to multiple people you say "salvete" (pronounced "sol-way-tay").
To say "Who am I?" in Latin you can say "quisnam sum Ego?"