Nihil = 'Nothing' as a noun; 'not at all' as an abverb
The word nihil comes from the latin word which means "nothing". This is why today in English we say "nil" to mean nothing.
"Nothing" is nihil in Latin, or nil for short.
Nihil agis, nihil moliris, nihil cogitas. The anaphora is in the successive repetition of 'nihil.'
Infinitum Nihil was created in 2004.
nihil timendum est = fear nothing nihil timeo = I fear nothing
Umbra Nihil (or umbra de nihil).
nusquam, nihilum, nihil are the three conjugations of the latin word for nothing. I also added a link to a translation website in case you have further questions. Nihilum and nihil are good words for 'nothing', as is 'nil'. 'Nusquam', however, is an adverb meaning 'nowhere'. Do not trust any on-line translation site for Latin. They are all notoriously inaccurate. The latin for "nothing" is nihil, which is the root of the English word nil.
whats the prefix nihil mean?
Nothing foreign is the English equivalent of 'nihil alienum'. In the word by word translation, the neuter gender noun 'nihil' means 'nothing'. The neuter gender adjective 'alienum' means 'foreign, strange'.
Nihil
Nihil timoris.
Nihil.
Nihil peditum.