exitium = destruction
la destruction
French spell it just the same, "destruction"
Vac is Latin
Ego IS a Latin word. It is the Latin for I.
solus is the latin word for alone ( it is a latin root and can have endings added to it )
bringer in Latin is nutritor
Destruction
Their destruction at the hands of Spanish Conquistadores.
ruina -ae f. [falling down , collapse, ruin, destruction; the ruins of a building, debris].Sources: etymonline.com; Cassell's Latin Dicitonary.
The removal or destruction of a body part calls for the suffix "-ectomy" appended to the (usually Latin name) of that body part. For example: The removal of the vermiform appendix is an appendectomy.
Felo de se, Latin for "felon of himself", is an archaic legal term meaning suicide.Another term for suicide is self-destruction.
The root word of "perish" is "per-" which means "completely" or "through." It comes from Latin and is used to convey a sense of complete destruction or annihilation.
The Latin derivation suggests that it stands for complete burning. Of course, that is not the literal meaning. But the intention of the Holocaust was the complete destruction of the Jewish population (although not always by burning).
The Latin root word that means the killing of a race or people is "geno," derived from the Latin word "genus" meaning race or kind. An example word using this root is genocide, which refers to the deliberate and systematic destruction of a racial, ethnic, or national group.
The Latin name "Mabus" is often interpreted as a combination of elements that could refer to "mother" or "great mother," stemming from the word "mā," which means mother in various Latin-derived languages. Additionally, Mabus is sometimes associated with the concept of destruction or ruin, particularly in esoteric or prophetic contexts, as it appears in certain interpretations of Nostradamus's quatrains. However, it is not a common name in classical Latin literature, and its significance can vary based on context.
The term "vandal" comes from the Latin word "Vandali," which was the name of a Germanic tribe that invaded the Roman Empire in the 5th century and looted and sacked many cities. This historical event led to the association of the term with destruction and damage.
yes