Sed in English means but.
i.e. "sed" - but there are others... By the way, the i.e. is latin, too (in exemplo).
tamen, sed, quod, ceterum, autem, at
It means she is thirsty. Literally translates to "She has thirst."
Truth in Latin is veri.
Tam quídam plérumque means As a whole when translated into Latin.
For a man who has died it would be "peritus sed numquam obliteratus" or "peritus sed semper inobliteratus" swap -us for -a and it applies to a woman In Latin, you can't have a passive of the normal word for "to forget" in the way you want, so that's the best I could do.
sed
i.e. "sed" - but there are others... By the way, the i.e. is latin, too (in exemplo).
"Sed" is not an English word - what exactly are you trying to ask?
Thirst
This is a not-quite-successful translation of "We are always in excrement, only the depth varies."The main problems: excretum is not really "excrement"; alta is "[the] depths" (i.e., deep places), not the quality "depth"; sed is "but" or "however".A better translation would beSemper in merda sumus; altitudo solum variat.There are several Latin words for excrement, of varying degrees of politeness. The most basic is merda, which gave rise to the common Romance words; the Romans themselves used stercus"dung, manure" as a term of abuse; for the more fastidious there's excrementum, although this word has a more general application in Latin than in English (Tacitus uses it for spittle and mucus).
"Not everything is difficult but nothing (is) easy" is an English equivalent of the Latin phrase Non totum difficile est sed nihil facile. The phrase also translates as "All is not difficult but nothing (is) easy" in English. The pronunciation will be "non TO-tuhm deef-FEE-kee-ley est sed NEE-hihl FA-kee-ley" in Church and classical Latin.
Sed.
The standard expression is dura lex sed lex (literally, "harsh law but law").
we don't learn for school but for life
Then they exclaim "We are pigs, but we were humans. Alas!" (I assume that the word "Alas" in the question is English and not to be translated. If it's Latin, it means "Wings".)
Sed is "thirst" Tener sed means "To be thirsty". For example: Tengo sed is 'I'm thirsty'.