You use some form of posse, "to be able," plus the infinitive of a verb. For example, if you wanted to say "can sing" ("to sing" = canere), the present tense forms would be:
possum canere - "I can sing"
potes canere - "You [singular] can sing"
potest canere - "He, she, or it can sing"
possumus canere - "We can sing"
potestis canere - "You [plural] can sing"
possunt canere - "They can sing"
It would also be possible to use the verb scire ("to know") instead of posse. This would convey "can" in the sense of "know how to . . .". The forms of scire in the present tense are scio, scis, scit, scimus, scitis, sciunt.
What is the latin word for census?
The word is derived from the Latin word "census" which declines as a 2nd declension noun.
something fully-rottened (as to be helpful for growing up)
What does the English phrase Strength of will translate into in Latin?
Vis animae means "strength of spirit/will."
In Latin, quae is a feminine or neuter form of the interrogative pronoun quis, quid or the relative pronoun qui, quae, quod. Translations, depending on context, include "who", "which", "what" and "that".
In World of Warcraft, Quae is a level 38 female humanoid in the Arathi highlands.
How do you say lover in Latin?
The word "lover" in Latin is said as "amanti". A lover is someone close who people share feelings together.
It would be truculentus.
Grimmer = truculentior.
Grimmest = truculentissimus (I think that's the spelling.)