The Latin word "angelus" can be translated to mean "angel" in modern English. The Latin term "Angelus" is used in many Roman Catholic prayers, such as in the phrase "Angelus Domini".
Many of our common English words are directly descended from Latin with little or no changes. In this case, the Latin word for angel is angelus.
"Angel" is an English equivalent of the Latin word angelus. The masculine singular noun represents the nominative case of the word as the subject of a phrase or sentence. The pronunciation will be "AN-gey-loos" in classical Latin and "AN-djey-loos" in Church Latin.
"Angel" in Latin is angelus (-i, m.)
Spes (genitive: spei, f) - hope Sperare - to hope.
The Latin word "vitae" translates to "life" in English.
what does the Latin word Chalacombarum
The Latin word opus translated into English mean deed or labor.
Haec is the Latin word for "this" or "those"
The Latin word for an angel is "angelus"; for more than one angel (i.e. angels, the plural form) the word would transform into "angeli". It's sometimes disappointing to find the Latin word both looks and means much the same thing in English... but for the sake of adding a little bit of variety to this answer, I could mention that both the related Latin and English terms ultimately derived from the Greek word "angelos", which literally means "messenger", and which in the context of Biblical study grew to take the meaning "messenger of god".
It is the Latin word for "road"
mono is not a latin word
A "heavenly messenger" in Latin is literally nuntius caelestis. But you may be thinking of the word angelus, which is a borrowing into Latin of the Greek word for "messenger".