In Latin, apricot means "precious," a label earned because it ripens earlier than other summer fruits
Precious in Japanese is "ki-chou", "dai-ji", etc.
beautiful; however, it's usually used as precious.
You could say kicho na if it is a valuable or useful commodity, or koka na if it is a precious object.
prezioso/a
Vac is Latin
There are many ways of saying precious in latin, but i'm assuming that pretiosa is the most commonly used way of saying precious in latin.
Precious in Latin is pretiosus, pretiosa ,pretiosum
pretiosa
Wood or metal. Sometimes with precious stones such as emerald.
# Petroleum # iron ore # some precious metals and stones # timber
Oh, dude, you want some Latin vibes? Alright, so words with the Latin root "prec" include "precious" and "precise." They're all about being all fancy and specific, you know? Like, "Oh, look at me, I'm so precious and precise with my Latin roots."
It's latin for "precious stone", it's from Italy and in Italian the name means "Gemstone".
It comes from the Latin pretium 'price, which has also given us the English words precious, price, prize, etc.
You could say: "Vita est splendida, egreqia, or eximia", depending on your shade of meaning. Also, "Vita est gemma" would work, although the word "gemma" literally means a precious stone.
A long-lasting and rewarding source of prosperity for Latin America came from natural resources. Precious metals, sugar, rubber, grains, coffee, copper, and oil are some of the resources that have boosted Latin American economies.
Ruby comes from the English name, simply meaning "A ruby jewel".
The element originally identified by its Latin name "argentum" is silver, which is represented by the chemical symbol Ag. Silver is a precious metal known for its lustrous appearance and valuable properties.