Pater is the most common Latin equivalent of 'father'. It's a masculine gender noun. Another equivalent is 'genitor', but as 'father' in the sense of 'propagator'. Another equivalent is 'parens', but as 'father' in the sense of 'parent'.
pater = father in Latin
Gratias (tibi ago), pater.
Depending on the grammatical context:meus pater (subject)mi pater ("O my father!")mei patris ("of my father")meo patri ("to/for my father")meum patrem (object of verb or some prepositions)meo patre ("by/with/from my father")Latin word order is flexible; any of these could have the words in the opposite order.
In the name But it should be in nomine eg in nomine patris = in the name of the father
Jupiter or Jove was the Latin name for the Roman chief of the Gods. He was roughly equivalent to the Greek Zeus. The word is a compound of two other words meaning God and Father and means something like "O Father God" , rather like the "Our Father" which starts the Lord's Prayer. The name is rendered in Latin as Jupiter, or in Classical Latin, before the letter "J" was introduced into that language's alphabet, as Iupiter. Either way, the name would be pronounced as if it began with the sound given in English to the letter "Y" - yoop-it-eer
pater = father in Latin
Patris is the genitive singular of the Latin word for "father", pater. It means "of a father" or "of the father". (Latin has no words for "a" or "the", so a translation has to supply them when necessary.)
My father I miss you
The Latin word for father is Pater. The Latin for daddy is tata.
The Father of Latin prose was Caecus. He was a Roman politician and a copy of one of his speeches is the earliest known political manuscript in Latin in existence.
Father is Pater in Latin.
Mother in latin is mater and father is pater.
Diēs patris is a Latin equivalent of the English phrase "Father's Day." The phrase translates literally as "day of (the) father" in English. The pronunciation will be "dee-eyss pa-trees" in Church and classical Latin.
Tuus pater.
Pater
Pater
It derives from the Latin word 'papa' which means 'father.'