Cor atrum.
atrum puteulanus
The blood goes to the left atrum
The blood goes to the left atrum
This is a string of Latin nonsense produced by an online translator. What was put in was "come to the dark side embrace the dark within"; what came out was more like "I approach a dark thing part I embrace a dark thing within."
The blood then flows into to the right ventricle, and out into the pulmonary artery through the pulmonic valve.
chamber for pumping blood Let's give this a little more detail. The left atrium receives oxygenated blood from the lungs via the pulmonary veins. It then pumps blood down into the left ventricle, so the left ventricle can pump oxygenated blood out to the body.
Dull black is the English equivalent of 'ater'. The feminine and neuter forms of the masculine gender adjective are 'atra' and 'atrum', respectively. But whatever the form, the Latin adjective refers to 'dark, dead, dull' black. The adjective 'niger' is the word of choice in regard to 'glossy, shining' black.
The right atrium is where deoxygenated blood enters the heart.
On the right side of your heart called the right atrium deoxgenated blood comes in from the body and then leaves to thelungs.That same blood then comes through from the lung to the left side of your heart now converted to oxgenated blood and gets pumped from the left atrum to the rest of the body giving oxcygen to the cells to respire.i hope this helps
ater, atra, atrum - also means black or gloomy.All terms listed are in the nominative case (also accusative for neuter), in this order: masculine, feminine, neuter.
In this case you don't use NIGER NIGRA NIGRUM but ATER ATRA ATRUM, dark, black, gloomy. So DARK ANGEL would be ATER ANGELUS (Ahn ghe loos) or ANGELUS ATER. You can also use the feminine ATRA ANGELA. Classic Latin for WING is ALA. So dark wings can be ALAE NIGRAE or ALAE ATRAE. In Portuguese we have Anjo (Aunzhoo) Negro, Anjo Atro, Anjo Sombrio, Anjo Umbroso, Anjo Escuro, Anjo das Trevas, Anjo das Sombras, Anjo Tenebroso, Anjo Mal, Anjo Alado Sombrio and also Angelo Atro. The winds would be Asas Obscuras, Alas Atras, Asas Sombrias, Alas Negras. In Spanish you would have Ángel (An heh L) Oscuro, Ángel Negro and Alas Oscuras. In French: Ange (Aunzhe) Noir, Ange Sombre and Ailes sombres. Italian: Angelo (An djeh loh) Nero, Angelo Ombroso, Angelo Oscuro and Ali Scure. Romanian: Inger Negru, Inger Intunecos, Inger Sumbru and Aripi Negri, Aripile Intunericului.