What does the Latin root Sta mean?
Sta- is from the Latin verb STO, STARE meaning "to stand". From it we get the English word "stationary".
Fair originates from which Latin word?
The English word "fair" in the sense of a large yearly market derives from Classical Latin feriae, meaning a holy day (Holy Day). This evolved into Medieval Latin feria, a market fair, then into Old French as feire.
What is fallen angel in latin?
fallen angel ; cecidit angelus, the fallen angel ; angelus autem ceciderunt.
Feel free to correct my answer if it's incorrect in any way.
What is 'person who follows orders without question' in Latin?
Homo qui sine quaestione mandatis oboedit is the Latin equivalent of 'person who follows orders without question'. In the word by word translation, the noun 'homo' means 'man, person'. The relative pronoun 'qui' means 'who'. The preposition 'sine' means 'without'. The noun 'quaestione' means 'question'. The noun 'mandatis' means 'commands, orders'. The verb 'oboedit' means '[he/she/it] does obey, is obeying, obeys'.
What is latin word for country?
The classical Latin terms for a small or medium-sized settlement were vicus and pagus.
In medieval or Low Latin, the term villa came to mean a village - this is used throughout Domesday Book of 1086 - 1087.
What does it mean to say that matter is a 'sine qua non' in a human life?
The Latin phrase 'sine qua non' may be taken to mean '[a condition] without which it could not be'. The word-by-word translation is the following: 'sine' means 'without'; 'qua' means 'which'; and 'non' means 'not'. It therefore is an 'indspensable and essential action, condition or ingredient'. And so the statement says that human life is impossible without matter.