Nihilism and nil.
Some English derivatives of the name 'Gloria' include Gloriana and Glory.
The verb expect, the adjective expectant, and the noun expectation are English derivatives of 'exspectat'. The Latin verb 'exspectat' is the third person singular form of the present indicative tense. So it may be translated as '[he/she/it] awaits, does await, is awaiting'. It derives from the combination of the preposition 'ex' for 'out' and the infinitive 'spectare' for 'to watch for'.
The English derivatives of the Latin word "iudex" include "judge" and "judicial."
AdmitOmitSubmitTransmitEmitManumit (the ceremony of freeing a slave in ancient Rome)Remit
The noun family and the adjective familiar are English derivatives of 'familia', which means 'family, household'. The Latin word is a feminine gender noun that comes from 'famulus'. As an adjective, 'famulis' means 'servile, serving'. As a noun, it means 'a house servant, slave'.
Discovery discovers discovered discovering
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'.
Words beginning with dw include:dwarfishnessesdwarfishnessdwarfishlydwarfismsdwellingsdwindlingdwarflikedwarfnessdwarfingdwellersdweebishdweebierdwindlesdwindleddwindlesdwarvesdwarveddwarferdwelleddwellerdwiningdwineddwarfsdweebsdweebydwelldwarfdweltdweebdwine(and the proper name Dwayne)
Nihil = 'Nothing' as a noun; 'not at all' as an abverb
Some English derivatives of the name 'Gloria' include Gloriana and Glory.
The English derivatives of "senex" include "senior," "senate," and "senility."
The verb expect, the adjective expectant, and the noun expectation are English derivatives of 'exspectat'. The Latin verb 'exspectat' is the third person singular form of the present indicative tense. So it may be translated as '[he/she/it] awaits, does await, is awaiting'. It derives from the combination of the preposition 'ex' for 'out' and the infinitive 'spectare' for 'to watch for'.
List of Latin words with English derivatives - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
It means "[there is] nothing without work"
English derivatives of discipulus would include ones like discipline, disciples, etc
The English derivatives of the Latin word "iudex" include "judge" and "judicial."
Nothing is too difficult for the brave.