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Does anyone know what the word: Ausus, tellum, Utar, vendo Visne, Veneris are???
Also does anyone know how to translate english to latin- The guest arrived at his pool?

2006-10-31 09:35:55 · 4 answers · asked by Anonymous in Society & Culture Languages

4 answers

ausus ~ having dared (audeo)
tellum ~ ? . Could be misspelling of telum ~ missile, or tellus ~earth
utar ~ I shall use, or, let me use (utor)
vendo ~ I sell
visne ~ do you wish..? (vis from volo + ne)
Veneris ~ of Venus (if capital letter), or ,you shall have come (venio)

To translate "the guest arrived at his pool" we probably need to refer to "balneum", a place of bathing, rather than "lacuna", a place where water collects to form a pool. "His" (suum) needn't be translated unless you want to express "his own" emphatically.

~ Hospes in balneum (suum) advenit
~ Hospes ad balneum pervenit

2006-11-01 07:04:01 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

ausus-4th pricipal part of audeo(dare)
tellum-possibly telum teli a weapon or dart
utar-(from utor) i shall use
vendo-I sell
visne-do you wish? from volo
veneris-you will have come or you may have come from venio

I don't know a word for pool but here you go:
advena(probably not the best word) in {pool} su* pervenit
put an accusative ending on suus to match the gender of pool.

2006-10-31 17:52:06 · answer #2 · answered by datacovdelives 1 · 1 0

ausus - a daring attempt, an endeavor

telum (one "l") - a spear or javelin (unless you meant tellus, which means the earth, that is, the ground, dry land.

vendo - to sell or offer for sale

veneris - to revere, venerate, or worship

2006-10-31 17:54:25 · answer #3 · answered by PaulCyp 7 · 0 2

I think you should do your own homework.

2006-10-31 17:39:43 · answer #4 · answered by mstrywmn 7 · 0 2

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