Alia officia quae delegari possint. (Not an exact translation: "Other duties which may be assigned.")
An office assistant might answer phones, make copies or do filing. They might help prepare report s or any other duties that are assigned.
In school I was taught classical latin. Other versions are known as ecclesiastic latin for instance. Classical latin pronunciation is very simple and straight forward - so your phrase would be - "May-us fratt-er cust-oh-diss"
Police squads carry out whatever activities that they are assigned. For example, last year, a police squad was assigned to take on the job of security for the 2012 London Olympics. Other duties may be carried out as assigned.
No. They may not engage in any other work except their assigned job duties.
Italian is derived from vulgar ( that is non-Classical) Latin, with a heavy Germanic influence.
A back office job is a job that is done in an office but not up front. You do not have to be the receptions or answer the phone. You are assigned other duties.
The Dewey Decimal system's 400-499 section mostly covers topics related to language. This range includes linguistics (400), English language (420), French (440), German (430), and a variety of other languages and language families. It also encompasses grammar, dictionaries, and other language resources.
The Chief Prosecutor of the state, and the state's legal counsel, and other duties as assigned by that particular state's law or governor.
Hi, First of all which work has assigned him. He can do hardware, software and Networking management etc. Thanks Techvedic
The Latin language and the old Greek are classical languages; different authors add many other languages to the list but a rule doesn't exist - it is a question of preference.
latin terms are widely used in both animal and people medicine terminology so id say that is why latin is important. The other im not too sure :-D
"Culina" is a Latin equivalent of "kitchen."There are two main approaches to the pronunciation of Latin. One respects the rules of the liturgical Latin of the Church. The other follows the rules of the classical Latin of the ancient Romans.Sometimes the two differ. At other times, they agree. In this case, the pronunciation is the same: "koo-LEE-nah."