The noun "attack" in Latin is impetus (-us, m.: fourth declension).
"To attack" can be translated petere or impetum facere (literally "to make an attack").
Any of these will work, but they all mean the same thing :)
Aggredior, aggredi (3), aggressus sum= to attack
I wasn't 100% sure about the latin verb (from which aggressive has been derived)... aggredior : to go to, approach, address, attack It's part of the deponent verbs (this means more or less that they have a passive declination form... but their meaning is active... i.e. as if "I have been seen" would have the meaning of "I have seen"...).
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 )
impetum
Aggredior, aggredi (3), aggressus sum= to attack
Impetus in Romam.
The Monroe Doctrine
Monroe Doctrine
"They attack" [an enemy]; "they make for" [a destination]; "they seek".
I'm pretty sure the Latin word for ahead is Grassor. It is defined as go ahead, proceed and attack.
no one can attack me without being punished
James Monroe wanted to keep the Europeans out of Latin America so that no one would have a foothold to attack the US.
"Let us stoutly resist the enemy's attack"
Salmonella typhi attack anybody in general. They usually attack people in poor sanitation areas and travelers. How ever travelers get the disease by traveling to communities with poor sanitation such as Asia, Africa and Latin America.
Cardiac myopathy is the medical term for a heart attack. It translates from the latin as "heart muscle death."