Jail. The Latin-based word is 'sororicide'.
The Latin word for siblings is fratribus. The Latin word for sister is soror, while the Latin word for brother is frater.
Ego IS a Latin word. It is the Latin for I.
The Latin word for "after" is post.
When you ask the Latin word for false I assume you mean the word "no". In Latin the word "no" is "minime".
What is the Latin word for people
The Latin word for killing your sister is sororicidium, from the words soror "sister" and caedes "murder". This is the source of the modern English word "sororicide".A person who commits sororicidium is a sororicida(1st-declension masculine).
The Latin word for sister is "soror."
The Latin word for siblings is fratribus. The Latin word for sister is soror, while the Latin word for brother is frater.
soror
Germana= Sister
Matricide: From the Latin words for mother and kill
The Latin root word that means the killing of a race or people is "geno," derived from the Latin word "genus" meaning race or kind. An example word using this root is genocide, which refers to the deliberate and systematic destruction of a racial, ethnic, or national group.
Soror bona tua
The word Soror in Latin means Sister. Sorority and soroptimist are some of the words that are derived from this term.
Sorority. It comes from the latin word "soror" which means sister.
The Latin root "-cide" comes from the word caedere, which means "to kill." There are many examples of it used in English words:Homicide - killing a personSuicide - killing oneselfPatricide - killing one's fatherMatricide - killing one's motherFratricide - killing one's brotherSororicide - killing one's sisterRegicide - killing a kingInfanticide - killing a babyGenocide - killing an entire group or race of peoplePesticide - killing pests (insects, rodents, weeds, other unwanted organisms)Herbicide - killing plants (weeds)Insecticide - killing insectsFungicide - killing fungusThese are just some of the more common examples. You can find many more online or in a dictionary.
The Latin word for "aunt" is amita if referring to one's father's sister, or matertera if referring to one's mother's sister.