The Latin word for "road" is 'via.' The ablative plural of 'via' is 'viis.'
Latin, Ad astra per aspera. A difficult (or, rough) road leads to the stars.
Per aspera ad astra That's a fairly common Latin motto - the South African Air Force uses it. It's also sometimes reversed - Ad astra per aspera - that's the motto of the State of Kansas. Asperum means 'a rough place, adversity, or (in plural form) difficulties,' so you will see several versions - Through difficulties/hardship/adversity to the stars.
The Latin equivalent of the English phrase 'hopeful journey' is the following: iter cum spe. The word 'iter' means 'going, walk, way'; 'journey, march'; 'permission to march, right of way'; 'road, way'; 'course, method, way'. The word 'cum' means 'with'; and 'spei' means 'expectation'; 'hope'; 'anticipation, fear, foreboding'.
'cul-de-sac' is a common French expression to indicate a road closed at the other end.
This is clumsy Spanish syntax. It means "Underneath one there is [a] road." A better arrangement of the words is "abajo hay una calle." There is nothing clumsy about the arrangement. It means, "Underneath, there's a road."
Via in Latin was the word for a road or way. For example, the road we call the Appian Way was known to the ancient Romans as Via Appia. When used in the ablative case (viā), it could mean "by way [of]," and this is the source of the English preposition "via," which means the same thing.
Road as a plural is roads.
The plural of road is roads
There is no plural past tense of road. Road is a noun, not a verb.
The Latin root word for path is "via," which means road or way.
The plural possessive form of "road" is "roads'".
The latin word for road is vía.
via means through. better yet, it also means by way of. it was derived from the latin word "via" meaning Road
The Latin word via means a road, or a way (an unpaved track or footpath).
roads
Traffic is a noun - the plural form is still 'traffic' (no 's' on the end). "There is a lot of traffic on the road."
Vis, all by itself, means "power, strength, force." It often appears in the plural with the same meaning, as in the famous quotation from Virgil's Aeneid, "vires acquirit eundo" - "it gains strength as it goes."Vis- as a root of English words involving seeing such as visible, vision, revise, etc., is from visus, the past participle of the verb videre meaning "to see."