usually a god/person would be substituted for death, probably the god of the underworld Pluto, leading to a phrase like: "Pluto omnes adridet." meaning Pluto smiles (laughs) at all. if you literally wanted to use "death" then you could substitute "Mors" for "Pluto," though the noun "mors" doesn't have the same meaning as the modern personification of death that often comes to mind
Latin for death is mortis or mors. The Latin word for demons is daemon, or daemonium. So the full sentence would be Mors Omnia daemonia.
There are far too many animals in latin America to be able to write all of there names down
There shall be no fear in smiles for we shall all be happy human beings =]
All of them" A snack that smiles baack goldfish!"
If she smiles then it's a YES. She just wasnt expecting it is all.
Firstly there is no such thing as the Roman alphabet, they spoke Latin. 'N' was written in upper-case letters as all Latin is.
Smiles can be a noun or a verb. Noun: the plural of smile. "There were smiles all around the room." Verb: Third-person singular simple present of the verb smile. "She smiles at the picture"
All smiles
Medieval calligraphers needed to be able to write especially beautifully, and they needed to do it in Latin. So, they needed to be able to read and write, they needed training in the art of calligraphy, and they needed to learn Latin. These things were all taught in monastic schools all over Europe.
The Latin equivalent of 'Death walks amongst you' is Mors inter vos ambulant. In the word-by-word translation, the noun 'mors' means 'death'. The preposition 'inter' means 'among, amongst'. The personal pronoun 'vos' means 'you all'. The verb 'ambulant' means '[they] are walking, do walk, walk'.
Roman is not a language. Latin is the language spoken by the Ancient Romans.
no, she likes to smile that's all.