Question | Answer |
anima, -as | f. breath, life, soul |
animus, -ī | m. spirit, mind, soul; (plural) morale |
aqua, -ae | f. water |
cōnsilium, -ī | n. plan; advice, counsel |
captīvus, -a, -um | captive |
foedus, -a, -um | foul, filthy, horrible, detestable |
grātus, -a. -um | pleasing, welcome; grateful |
vērus, -a, -um | true, real |
cōnfirmō, -āre, -āvī, -ātum | strengthen; establish; encourage |
iuvō, iuvāre, iūvī, iūtum | help, assist; delight, please, gratify |
circum (prep. w acc.) | around (adv.) around, round about |
inter (prep. w. acc) | amoung, between |
prope (prep. w. acc.) | near (adv.) nearby; nearly |
mox (adv.) | soon. |
anima & animus both | come from a root meaning wind or breath. The anima animates; animals and humans have anima. Animals do not have animus, which is what enables humans to think. |
Captīvus | is often used in the masculine or feminine. |
aquatic | growing, living, or done on the water |
captivate | to capture the attention or the affection of |
circumference | the line bounding a circle; the distance around |
confirmation | proof, the act of establishing as true |
gratify | to give pleasure or satisfaction to |
magnanimous | noble; quick to overlook injury or insult |
verify | to prove or test the truth of. |