Is the latin word for beautiful lapasii?
No, the word lapasii doesn't exist in Latin. (It does exist in Finnish, where it appears to mean "mittens".)
What is the meaning of the Latin word adolescere?
"Adolescence" is from the Latin word adolescentia, which means "youth". This in turn is from the present participle (adolescens) of the verb adolescere, which means "to grow, to mature". So adolescence is the time of growth and maturation.
The Romans, by the way, had very different ideas about adolescence than we do. For them it lasted from about age 15 to age 30. Only after that was one considered fully matured, or adultus.
What does the Latin 'aestas' mean?
Siete is an Italian equivalent of the Latin word estis. The verb in question serves as the second person informal plural of the present indicative, with the English meaning of "You are." The respective pronunciations will be "SYEY-tey" in Italian and "eh-stihs" in Latin.
The word capital is derived from the Latin word caput, which means head. So a capital city is literally the head city of a state or nation.
How do you say Envy of Immortals in Latin?
invidia immortalium means both (envy which immortals feel toward mortals) and (envy which mortals feel toward immortals); just like in English.
What is the Latin word for keystone?
There is no such word in Latin, since Roman arches had no special keystone. An arch was either formed from identical wedge-shaped stones or from tiles cemented together.
How do I say and with you in Latin?
It depends on how many people you are speaking to and in what circumstances. In medieval monastic use, the correct response to Dominus vobiscum ("may the Lord be with you [all]") is et cum spiritu tuo ("and with thy spirit"), not "and with you".
If speaking to a single person, "and with you" is et tecum.
If speaking to more than one person, it is et vobiscum.
What does the latin root fract mean?
Do you mean "fractious"? Fractious describes someone who gets angry easily and then starts fights.
How do you say bad moon in Latin?
What does the phrase ignis artis aeturnus mean?
Ignis and aeturnus are both in the nom. sing. so pair 'em up. which leaves artis in the gen.
"The eternal fire of art" is what I came up with but that's probably very translation-ese.
What is the Latin term for intentionally so written?
"sic" means "thus", "so", etc. and is often used as "[sic]" meaning something like "intentionally so written", i.e. to point out that incorrect or unusual spelling or grammar in a quote was the mistake of the original speaker, not the quoter.