You are hungry = Esuris
Esurio means I hunger
'hambre' = 'hunger' (tengo hambre (lit. 'I have hunger') = I am hungry) 'Hambre' derives from Vulgar Latin 'Famen, faminis', Latin 'fames' There are good simple, longer etymologies on 'wiktionary' and 'fornerds.org'
A plane flies but never gets hungry.
A hungry clock goes back four seconds.
Vac is Latin
Esurio means I hunger
Hunger translates to fames in Latin. An example in a Latin sentence; Erat autem fames in re Paulo post, decanus. In English it translates to; It was hunger that later returned Paul to reality.
That would be imperium (-i, n. ), "the power to command."
Asia and the Pacific, which is home to 578 million of the world's hungry, compared to 239 million in Sub-Saharan Africa and 53 million in Latin America and the Caribbean.
am is a be verb. The present be verbs are: am -- I am hungry is -- He is hungry. She is hungry. It is hungry are -- They are hungry. We are hungry. You are hungry. The past be verbs are: was -- I/he/she/it was hungry were -- They/we/you were hungry.
present - am / is / are - I am hungry. She is hungry. They are hungry. We are hungrypast - was / were - I was hungry. He was hungry. They were hungry. We were hungrypast participle - been - I have been hungry. She has been hungry. They have been hungry
'hambre' = 'hunger' (tengo hambre (lit. 'I have hunger') = I am hungry) 'Hambre' derives from Vulgar Latin 'Famen, faminis', Latin 'fames' There are good simple, longer etymologies on 'wiktionary' and 'fornerds.org'
No you are not hungry.
hungry hungry
the hungry ones! the hungry ones! the hungry ones! the hungry ones!
it defines if you are hungry or not , if you hungry you can eat and because your hungry
as hungry as a louce