Caeruleus equus.
"Azul" is Spanish for "blue".
The latin word for horse is Equus. I hope this helps you.
Answer #1Puteulanus.Answer #2The Latin equivalent of 'blue' is Caeruleus. That's a masculine gender adjective. The adjectives 'caerulea' and 'caeruleum' are the feminine and neuter gender equivalents, respectively. The Latin adjective is used in terms of the blueness of salt and fresh waters, skies, and other blue-colored objects.
Centaur is a mythical creature with head, arms and torso of a man and body and legs of a horse. In Latin it is called Tatem.
I'm going to recommend caeli caerula, but there's a lot to consider.The classical Latin word for "sky," caelum, is neuter, but Old Latin it was masculine caelus, and it retains masculine gender when it appears in the plural (rarely, and poetically, in classical Latin but commonly in Church Latin, where it means "heavens").If you're writing classical Latin prose, what you get is a blue sky, caelum caeruleum (or caelum caerulum; the spelling of the adjective varies).If you're writing classical Latin poetry or Church Latin, you might prefer blue skies/heavens, caeli caerul[e]i.Or you may perfer to split the difference by going with the recommended phrase above, which is from De rerum natura ("On the Nature of Things") by the classical poet/philosopher Titus Lucretius Carus. Caeli caerula is literally "the blues of the sky."
The words "Iron Horse" translated into latin is "Equum Ferro".
"Azul" is Spanish for "blue".
Yes. Equinomorph does mean horse-shaped in Greek and Latin.
the scientific name for a horse horse^^^^^^horseisle answer it basicaly means horse in latin
One Horse Blue was created in 1977.
One Horse Blue ended in 1995.
equus, -i, m.
Equus.
Equa.
The latin word for horse is Equus. I hope this helps you.
The latin name of the blue tang is Paracanthurus Hepatus.The latin name of the Atlantic blue tang fish is Acanthurus coeruleus.
cete, blue