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A Latin AlphaNumeric Character is a Character which could be a a letter such as the letter " V " which has a numerical equivalent to it's order in the Latin Alphabet. it would be equivalent to the number " 22 ". Alphanumeric Equivalent Characters or Symbols are used in Coded Encrypted Communications or Cyphers, or Transmissions which are known only to the sender and intended receiver of the communicae.
Heracles (his Greek name, Hercules is the Latin form) does not appear in person at all in the Iliad. So he isn't a main character, or even a character.
"Flamma" is the Latin word for fire or flame. There is no historical character of note with that nickname or name. However it could possibly be a character in a novel or game.
There are several ways to say person in Latin. The first is homo, meaning being or individual. Then there is persona, which refers to a person's character or personality.
Homo is the Latin equivalent of 'person' in the sense of a human being. Persona is another equivalent. But it serves as the grammatical term, or as the character in a stage play.
The UCS2 code for 'z' is hex '007A'
The number of bytes used by a character varies from language to language. Java uses a 16-bit (two-byte) character so that it can represent many non-Latin characters in the Unicode character set.
I am not sure about the Latin part, but I would think Viktor Krum would come close. It is a mispelling of Victor, which is a synonym of champion.
This is an Italian form of the Latin name Herminia. In Antioch, you'd probably be more likely to see the Latin form.
The English word mercenary can be both an adjective (describing a person's character) and a noun (a type of soldier for hire). In Latin the adjective is mercenarius and the noun is miles conductus.