Fire - flamma; Water - aqua; Earth - terra; Air - aeris/aer.
elementum=element
"quattuor" is 4 in latin
ourfay rmedaay
I'm going to recommend caeli caerula, but there's a lot to consider.The classical Latin word for "sky," caelum, is neuter, but Old Latin it was masculine caelus, and it retains masculine gender when it appears in the plural (rarely, and poetically, in classical Latin but commonly in Church Latin, where it means "heavens").If you're writing classical Latin prose, what you get is a blue sky, caelum caeruleum (or caelum caerulum; the spelling of the adjective varies).If you're writing classical Latin poetry or Church Latin, you might prefer blue skies/heavens, caeli caerul[e]i.Or you may perfer to split the difference by going with the recommended phrase above, which is from De rerum natura ("On the Nature of Things") by the classical poet/philosopher Titus Lucretius Carus. Caeli caerula is literally "the blues of the sky."
It depends on where it's spoken. If its classical latin you say [naski, as in "basket", but medieval Italian latin, used by most choirs and by the Church, it's [nasci] as in "push". In northern Europe, and France it would be [nasi] as in "peace"
In classical Latin the number CDL (450) is pronounced quadrigenti quinquaginta
In Classical Latin, quasi praeteriens ("as if passing by" - Cicero). In later Christian Latin, praetereunter("passing-by-ly").
elementum=element
"quattuor" is 4 in latin
Old English was a highly inflected language. Its four cases were the same as four of the five cases in ancient, classical Latin. It lacked the Latin language's ablative case for the objects of prepositions. Otherwise, it would have been more cooperative than modern English in retaining Latin word order.
The Latin word is 'grossus' meaning thick or coarse, referring to either the food or the mind. Grossus is not classical Latin
Spiritus surgens or spiritus ascendens(ascendens is commonly "rising" in Church Latin but means "climbing" in classical Latin).
From the Latin sulfur, sulphur, or sulpur, which appear to have been Latin inventions and not derived from, say, classical Greek (the classical Greek word for sulfur is thion).It's most likely from a root meaning "to burn."
Hard to say since you're not mentioning the four elements.
FOUR-tiss.
ourfay rmedaay
Graphics in the modern sense did not exist in classical times, so Latin has no direct translation. The words for pictures are: tabulae, tabellae, effigies.