food
Cibus.
The Latin word for supper is coena.
Cibus pro itinere
The Latin word for food is "cibus."
Cibus cibus The Latin for food is victus, victus m. 4th
mensa. You could say, cibus est in mensa (The food is on the table).
masculine
Fuel=Cibus(Chi-Boos)
The Latin equivalent of the English statement 'Music is food for the soul' is the following: Musica est cibus pro anima. In the word-by-word translation, the noun 'musica' means 'music'. The verb 'est' means '[he/she/it] is'. The noun 'cibus' means 'food'. The preposition 'pro' means 'for'. And the noun 'anima' means 'soul'.
Yes. Comedere. It's the infinitive of the verb: to eat.Verbs in Latin conjugate in a variety of ways. There are four basic conjugations which are referred to as their four principle parts. Comedere is the 2nd principle part: the infinitive.Latin verbs also contain properties such as mood, voice, tense, participle.The word comedere is in the active voice, present tense, indicative mood. The basic active paradigm then is:Comedo I eatComedisyou eatComedithe/she/it eatsComedemus weeatComedetis you alleatComedent they eatSo if I write: comedo piscis. I am saying, "I eat fish." But if I want to say, "They ate fish," then I would have to write:Comedebant pisces. because I have changed the tense to imperfect (past) and thus the verb ending and noun case changes.
There is no Latin word "journal". But if you mean the Latin word for journal, it is "ephemeris".There is no Latin word "journal". But if you mean the Latin word for journal, it is "ephemeris".There is no Latin word "journal". But if you mean the Latin word for journal, it is "ephemeris".There is no Latin word "journal". But if you mean the Latin word for journal, it is "ephemeris".There is no Latin word "journal". But if you mean the Latin word for journal, it is "ephemeris".There is no Latin word "journal". But if you mean the Latin word for journal, it is "ephemeris".There is no Latin word "journal". But if you mean the Latin word for journal, it is "ephemeris".There is no Latin word "journal". But if you mean the Latin word for journal, it is "ephemeris".There is no Latin word "journal". But if you mean the Latin word for journal, it is "ephemeris".