nex, mortalitas, mors mortis, letum, plecto aliquem capite, excessum, decessus
"In death" may be translated into Latin as in morte.
Mors/Mortis
To say the words death or glory in the Latin language you say mortis et gloriae. To say this phrase in Italian you say la morte o la Gloria.Death or glory in Latin should be "Mors aut Gloria." "Mors" refers to "death," "aut" refers to "or," and "Gloria refers to "glory."
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.
"Eater" can be expressed as vorator (genitive voratoris), literally "devourer". "Death" is mors, genitive mortis, so the proper translation is Mortis Vorator or Vorator Mortis. The plural is Voratores Mortis.
From Latin mors, mortis: Death. Mortician literally means "One who's trade is the dead".
Mortis is the genitive singular form of mors, which means death; so - "of death".
Gloria is the Latin word for glory. The word for death is mors in the nominative case and mortis in the genitive case.
Very similar: immortalis. BTW morte in Italian is death, in Latin mors, mortis.
You can write the word "Death" in latin various ways. Commonly, one would use mortis (or mortuus, depending on the declension) as the word for Death. Other ways could be the following: nex, mortalitas, mors mortis, letum, plecto aliquem capite, excessum, or decessus.
Rigor mortis is one of the recognizable signs of death (Latin mors, mortis) that is caused by a chemical change in the muscles after death, causing the limbs of the corpse to become stiff (Latin rigor) and difficult to move or manipulate[1]