Prope means "near" in Latin. It can be used as a preposition (prope domum meam, "near my house") or as an adverb (biennium prope, "nearly two years").
The Latin word "prope" is an adverb, which means it describes the proximity or closeness of something.
Drum sticks.
This translates to: Why was the dog barking near the door?
That day is hot you almost brook err groom
No. What you inherit is yours, not his, and it isn't community property.
Well,somepeople says that he proposed her in their trip to Hawaii and some says that he will propose her in her 19th birthday but it doesn't matter because it the both experience,he will prope her and i am so sad.
It's garbage - Latin words, but not inflected properly. Looks like someone took words from an English>Latin dictionary and put them together. Doesn't work that way.
"We saw many spectators standing near the theater in Pompeii." As in Englsh, the Latin is ambiguous about who was standing, "we" or "many spectators."
Well actually near in Latin is just near. I've checked every online site. It's just near. I also asked my Latin teacher so there you go, near is your answer! Enjoy!!!
Syphax is standing near the ship. stat -> third person singular of sto, stare, stavi, status. It means stand. Syphax -> a name. navem -> accusative singular of navis, meaning ship. Is this out of the Cambridge Latin book? That's a very good textbook.
Jacobus Philippus has written: 'De plurimis claris sceletisqb5s mulieribus opus prope diuinub5s novissime congestum' -- subject(s): Christian saints, Women, Martyrs, Biography, Queens 'Supplementum chronicarum' -- subject(s): Early works to 1800, Historical Chronology, World history