The Latin infinitive 'surgere' means to 'rise' or to 'get up'. it is conjugated as:
I surgo
You surgis
He/she/it surgit
We surgimus
You(pl) surgitis
They surgunt
Ego IS a Latin word. It is the Latin for I.
The Latin word for siblings is fratribus. The Latin word for sister is soror, while the Latin word for brother is frater.
The Latin word for "after" is post.
When you ask the Latin word for false I assume you mean the word "no". In Latin the word "no" is "minime".
Gloria is a Latin word
The Latin word is uxorius (-a, -um), which gave rise to the English equivalent, "uxorious". Uxor is the Latin word for "wife".
The English for the Latin word 'excito' is 'call forth, bring about, wake or rise up'
Iterum iterumque exsurge .............................
Insurgo, Insurgi. To rise up; to revolt.
First printed 1611, from Latin resurgere 'rise again'
The word "origin" is derived from the French word "origin" and the Latin word "originem," both of which mean, beginning, descent, birth, and rise.
Oriri - to rise
The Latin for sun is Sol, solis
To excel is first attested circa 1400, from Latin excellere "to rise, surpass, be eminent," from ex- "out from" + -cellere "rise high, tower"
Occido, occidere, meaning 'to fall down', or of heavenly bodies 'to set'. The West is the location of the setting sun. 'Oriental' is similarly from the Latin word orior, ori 'to rise'.
Oriri is the Latin equivalent of 'to originate'. It literally means 'to rise'. There's no known origin or root. But it may be connected to the Greek word 'ornymi'.
It entered during the 15th Century from the French word 'origine' derived from the Latin word 'Originem' meaning 'rise or beginning'