'Cur' means 'why...?'
The Latin translation for Brass is Orichalcum.
aculeus
parasitus
signum.
dynamica
Cur.
Cur festinas?
cur-seachadan
The Latin word "cur" means "why" or "for what reason." It is commonly used in Latin phrases and expressions to inquire about the cause or purpose of something.
cur dice latina EDIT: That is not a grammatical translation at all :) Without more input, there are a few ways to take the questions you asked: Why should (I) speak Latin Why should (we) speak Latin Why should (you) speak Latin Why should (y'all) speak Latin Why should (he/she/it) speak Latin Why should (they) speak Latin In English and Latin you can leave out a nominative, but in Latin any regular verb needs to have a person. In any of these situations, you would still begin: Cur dicam/dicas/dicat/dicamus/dicatis/dicant "Why should [subj] speak", using the subjunctive to convey the "should" aspect. The second part is tricky as well. Do you mean "[speak] in Latin", or a more general "[speak] the Latin language"? for the first: Cur dicamus Latine? and for the second: Cur dicamus linguam Latinam? (NB I decided to use only why should we speak, as it seems to fit most contexts you might be asking this for)
cursory
'Currure' is not a Latin word. 'Currere' means 'to run'.
the latin word cur meaning why
-cur-, root. -cur- comes from Latin, where it has the meanings "run; happen. '' These meanings are found in such words as: concur, concurrent, currency, current, curriculum, cursive, cursor, cursory, occur, occurrence, recur, recurrence.
-cur-, root. -cur- comes from Latin, where it has the meanings "run; happen. '' These meanings are found in such words as: concur, concurrent, currency, current, curriculum, cursive, cursor, cursory, occur, occurrence, recur, recurrence.
Ceasar would speak in Latin. In Latin you could say "why" in one of three ways:quare, quamobrem, cur
The latin translation for handbill is libelus