What are 3 words that correlate in English French and Latin?
Given that the French ruled England for many years, there are tons of identical words.
Too many to answer here.
Many English words exist in 2 forms, frequently with a Saxon or other origin for the common usage, and a French origin, identical or similar, for a more "savant" form. Like "ask" and "demand", "answer" and "response", etc.
The best solution would be to get hold of some free dictionaries in text format, and write a script that checks the presence of each English word in the French dictionary or vice versa.
In Latin does 'aurum' mean 'shining dawn'?
The English meaning of the Latin word 'aurum' is gold. The word may refer to the element or metal; or to something that's made of gold or gold plate. For example, it may refer to coins and money that are made of gold. And it may refer to the glittering color of gold. But what it doesn't refer to is the earlier, ancient, classical Greek word, which is 'chrysion'.
How do you translate life is short and death is long in Latin?
Vita est brevis
(Life is short)
et
(and)
mors est dui.
(Death is Long.)
Vita est brevis et mors est dui.
(Life is short and death is long.)
(Longus is the Latin word for "Long" in Length, but I chose "Dui" which means, "for a long time.")
What is Latin word for invention?
novO inventus O=long o lit. having been newly discovered fig. a new discovery, invention, or find
Quae locutio latina est vocabulum legalis describens hanc cognationem? is the Latin equivalent of 'What Latin phrase is the legal term to describe this relationship'. In the word by word translation, the interrogative pronoun 'quae' means 'what'. The noun 'locutio' means 'phrase'. The adjective 'latina' means 'Latin'. The verb 'est' means '[he/she/it] is'. The noun 'vocabulum' means 'term'. The adjective 'legalis' means 'legal'. The verb 'describens' means 'describing'. The demonstrative 'hanc' means 'this'. The noun 'cognationem' means 'relationship'.
How do you say my dear brother in latin?
I used Google Translator to find out . You could try too .
In latin , it`s , donec iterum conveniant fratrem .
"Your son" in Spanish is "tu hijo". It is pronounced "too EE-hoe". Please see this site for confirmation of the translation: http://www.answers.com/library/Translations
What is eat your pants in Latin?
What is 'when goodbye means forever' in Latin?
The Latin equivalent of 'when goodbye means forever' is Quando 'vale' significat 'semper'. In the word-by-word translation, the dependent conjunction 'quando' means 'when'. The verb 'vale' means 'farewell, goodbye'. The verb 'significat' means '[he/she/it] does mean, is meaning, means'. The adverb 'semper' means 'always, forever'.
What is the latin word for 'from the beginning'?
One of two Latin phrases may be chosen as equivalent to the English phrase 'from the beginning'. One option is the phrase ab initio, which is in the ablative case. The nominative, or subject, form of the word in the singular is 'initium', which means 'an entering upon' and, therefore, a beginning. Another option is ab ovo, which literally means 'from the egg'.
What is the Latin translation of door?
It depends upon the context. The Latin equivalent of the English word 'entrance' is introitus, in the sense of a physical passage. The word is ingressos, in the sense of an individual's act of entering a place or situation.
Who sings god bless you you make me feel brand new because god blessed me with you?
The Stylistics are the orignial artists
but since 1974 it has been covered many times by various artists.
Faith and fortitude translate in latin?
Fortitude comes from"Strength", like a fort {Ft. Hood, etc.}, a forte {like, something you're good at}, 'to fortify' {to strengthen} -- like the Olympic motto: "Citius, Altius, Fortius.": "Faster, Higher, Stronger."
caelestis or caeleste (yes, it's the root of the word celestial)
Tenses of the word are as follows
Masculine or Feminine
Singular:
Plural:
Neuter
Singular:
Plural:
Hope this helped!
What is the Latin word for Male slave?
boy, man, and male are alike, so boy= puer, man= homo, male= puer- homo
How will the knowledge of Latin and Greek prefixes and roots benefit a student?
Knowing what roots and prefixes mean are helpful to all students, because it makes learning vocabulary easier, and it also helps in learning any other romantic language. The reason it's so helpful for English vocabulary help is because English is at least 60% descended solely from Latin. An example of a vocabulary word using the latin to learn the meaning is "commiserate." Com- from con meaning with. miser- from miserus, misera, miserum, meaning wretched or miserable. Commiserate means to sympathize with.
Why are Latin terms still used today?
People still study Latin so scientists can read remains from the old times.