Inimicus - personal enemy
Hostis - public enemy
Hostis.
"Thief" in English is fūr in Latin.
The Latin phrase "Nihil melius amico, nihil peius inimico" translates to "No better friend, no worse enemy" in English. In this phrase, "nihil" means "no," "melius" means "better," "amico" means "friend," "peius" means "worse," and "inimico" means "enemy." This phrase emphasizes the importance of loyalty and the potential consequences of betrayal in relationships.
Vac is Latin
Ego IS a Latin word. It is the Latin for I.
The Latin word for an enemy is hostis or inimicus.
Hostis.
Hostis.
Hostis(genitive hostis; masc., third declension)
"They attack" [an enemy]; "they make for" [a destination]; "they seek".
The Latin root word for hostile is "hostilis," which means unfriendly, adversarial, or belonging to an enemy.
Host is a root word itself. It means 'enemy'.
-ssl -crips -sgd's Or anything with folk nation
"Let us stoutly resist the enemy's attack"
"Thief" in English is fūr in Latin.
The Latin phrase "Nihil melius amico, nihil peius inimico" translates to "No better friend, no worse enemy" in English. In this phrase, "nihil" means "no," "melius" means "better," "amico" means "friend," "peius" means "worse," and "inimico" means "enemy." This phrase emphasizes the importance of loyalty and the potential consequences of betrayal in relationships.
The base root for "adversary" is "advers-" which comes from the Latin word "adversarius," meaning opponent or enemy.