English has many derivative words.
Salute, Salutations
"Derivative of"
well, the second derivative is the derivative of the first derivative. so, the 2nd derivative of a function's indefinite integral is the derivative of the derivative of the function's indefinite integral. the derivative of a function's indefinite integral is the function, so the 2nd derivative of a function's indefinite integral is the derivative of the function.
Armando is the Spanish, Italian, Dutch and Portuguese derivative of the English name Herman; from the Old English here (army) + man (man).
The English derivative for "mother" is maternal.
terra - land as in terra firma
Terra Bella Bella terra
English has many derivative words.
The English derivative for the Latin word "vita" is "vital."
The English equivalent of 'a terris' is from the lands. In the word-by-word translation, the preposition 'a' means 'from'. The noun 'terris' means 'lands'. The particular preposition takes the ablative case. As the object of the preposition, the form is 'terris'. The form would be 'terras' in the accusative, as the direct object of the verb.
megalithos
Terra Firma means "solid earth"
Terra cotta in Italian means "baked earth" in English and originates from the same-meaning Latin phrase terra cocta.
"Canto della terra" translates to "Song of the Earth" in English. "Canto" means "song" or "chant," and "terra" means "earth" or "land." The phrase often conveys a sense of connection to nature or a celebration of the beauty of the natural world.
Omnipotent.
grandson/grandchild