'Left' in Latin is 'Sinister' and 'Right' is 'Dexter'
In Latin, dexter means right (as in right hand). The word for left hand is sinister.
suffrage
In absentia is Latin for "in the absence". In legal use it usually pertains to a defendant's right to be present in court proceedings in a criminal trial.
I believe that "it is what it is?" would translate to "est estne?" I am not sure but I think that it is right.
latin right
'Left' in Latin is 'Sinister' and 'Right' is 'Dexter'
It's derived from the English words copy and right; in the most basic sense, it is the right to copy.Copy is from the Latin copia, an abundance (as in copious), and right is from the Latin rectus.
I am right here with you
Aether is the right answer; Latin for aether is aether!
"Great" in Latin is "magnus."
In Latin, dexter means right (as in right hand). The word for left hand is sinister.
contracts, marriages, and citizenship were valid across latin
Dexter (Latin)
The Latin equivalent of the English phrase 'the right to vote' is Ius suffagium inire. In the word-by-word translation, the noun 'ius' means 'right'. The noun 'suffragium inire' means 'to vote'. The English word 'suffrage' comes from the Latin noun 'suffragium'.
the right eye (in Latin)
both ways