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What Is The Latin For

What is the word "week" in Latin?

The Romans did not reckon time by weeks, so there's not really an exact word for it. There are two basic Latin words for week.

One is hebdomas, hebdomadis, which means seven days. In Roman times this word was used to refer to the quarter moon and to the critical seventh day of an illness.

The second possible word is septimana, septimanae, which is late Latin for seven days.

Help with Latin. ASAP ?

1.....3
2 ... 2
3.....4
4.....2
5.....1
6.....2
7.....1
8.....3
9.....4
10...4
11...2
12...2
13...4
14...4
15...2
16...2
17...2
18...1
19...4
20...2

What is the Latin word for "hard"?

The original question is:What is the Latin word for "hard"?Answer:Stern, harsh, rough, inflexible = durus, dura, rigidus, rigidaSolid, firm, hardy = robustus, robustaCruel, unrefined = asper, asperaDifficult, troublesome = difficilis, difficileThick-skinned, hardened = callosus, callosa

What is the latin word for this??

Cross country race is not the gens kind... gens is like your heritage

If a word for "place" ends in -o, chances are that's a verb. If you are looking for a noun, there are other endings (and -o could possibly be one!) I think you are talking about 1st place, etc?

a foot race is a certamen cursus
or a cursus pedum

Vergil tells of a great foot race in the Aeneid, which is the book that the Romans considered to be their greatest legacy to mankind. In that book, the foot race was called "cursus rapidus" - a "fleet foot race"
First place was "primus" first
Second place was "alter"
Third place was "tertius"

I think it would be really cool to take the Latin from a famous Roman footrace for your shirt.

carpe praemium = sieze the prize
carpe cursus rapidum = sieze the fleet foot race

What is the Latin word for city?

Urbs indicates a fully evolved city, as does civitas, though the former has more to do with the physical infrastructure and the latter invokes the community aspect of the city.   Oppidum and astu imply something smaller, like a town.  Arx indicates a fortification, and, by metonymy, moenia ('walls') can mean a walled town or fortification.  Vicus usually implies a smaller village.

What is the Latin word for bored?

I just really want to know.

I looked it up on at Internet translator, but you can't trust those things as far as you can throw them. It told me it was taedium. Can anyone tell me if that is true?

What is the Latin word going?

If you mean the participle (“She, [whilst] going to the house, saw her mother.”), then the Latin word is iens (stem: eunt-; e.g. if you need “going” to refer to more than one person or thing, you need the form euntes or euntia).If you mean the gerund (“Going to the house is good.”) then for the nominative one uses the infinitive in Latin: ire. In the other cases, with some exceptions, one uses the gerund:eundi, eundo, eundum, eundo.Thus the two sample sentences above:Ea, iens ad domum, suam matrem vidit.Ad domum ire bonum est.It is often difficult to give a one-word translation into Latin w/out knowing exactly how this one word is supposed to be used. Latin is a highly inflected language, and the exact form of a word may vary greatly according to how it is used. If you need more specific information, please ask.

Question About Latin?

1: I had shown
2: you had called
3: they had saved
4: I will have built
5: you have loved
6: fueramus
7: fuerunt
8: fueritis
9: I have been
10: fuerimus
11: habitaverimus
12: portavit
13: occupaveras
14: speravero
15: navigaverunt
16: will have
17: they will have warned
18: perfect
19: had
20: third

What is the Latin word for copper?

aheneus, ahenea, aheneum ADJ [XXXCO] copper, of copper; bronze, made of bronze;ahenus, ahena, ahenum ADJ [XXXCO] copper, of copper (alloy); bronze, made of bronze, bronze-colored; brazen;aeneus, aenea, aeneum ADJ [XXXCO] copper, of copper (alloy); bronze, made of bronze, bronze-colored; brazen;aenus, aena, aenum ADJ [XXXCO] copper, of copper (alloy); bronze, made of bronze, bronze-colored; brazen;aercus, aerca, aercum ADJ [FXXEE] copper-; of copper/bronze/brass;All of these mean copper and can be used at any time. The first form of each is masculine, the second is feminine and the last one is neuter. Hope this helped!

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