I think it means "Death Waits". Will comment back if I find out I'm wrong.
It might also mean: "Never Wait"...
Hey, I found an answer! It means "I never await/expect."
For my love, I look for the
exspecto
Exspecto
Exspecto
If you mean the motto, yes there is. it is: "Draco doriens nunquam titillandus" or "Never tickle a sleeping dragon."
"Never" in Latin is numquam, or sometimes nunquam.
Semper fidelis
The Latin equivalent of the English statement 'Spirit never dies' is Spiritus nunquam moritur. In the word-by-word translation, the noun 'spiritus' means 'spirit'. The adverb 'nunquam' means 'never'. The verb 'moritur' means '[he/she/it] dies, does die, is dying'.(An alternative spelling for nunquam is numquam.)
Korps Commandotroepen's motto is 'Nunc aut Nunquam'.
Exspecto, exspectare, exspectavi, exspectatum means to look out for. And exspectat is the 3rd person singular present indicative active form of that.
One Latin equivalent of the English phrase 'Never back down' is the following: Nunquam redeas. Another equivalent is as follows: Nunquam redeatis. The word-by-word translation is the following: 'nunquam' means 'never'; and 'redeas' and 'redeatis' mean '[you] back down' and '[you all] back down', respectively.If you want to tell someone to never back down, that would be an inperative form.Noli cedere - addressed to one personNolite credere - addressed to more than one
NOON-kwahm nawn pah-RAH-toos is the pronunciation of 'nunquam non paratus' in both classical and liturgical Latin. The phrase means 'never unprepared'. In the word by word translation, the adverb 'nunquam' means 'never'. The adverb 'non' means 'not'. The participle 'paratus' means 'prepared, ready'.