Amor est gladius.
A bit odd, considering the two things are both nouns. Regardless, they match in gender, number, and case. The 'est' translates as 'is', and in latin articles such as 'the' or 'a' are implied.
Dolor est amor. (Or dolor amor est; Latin word order is flexible.)
You might also be interested in the typically classical, proverbial version ubi amor, ibi dolor "where there is love, there is pain." (Or perhaps in this case ubi dolor, ibi amor"where there is pain, there is love"?)
A rough translation is: "Diligo est Vitualamen"
Amor est caecus.
Te Amo Means 'I Love You' In Spanish And Latin.
The Latin translation for Brass is Orichalcum.
The Latin equivalent of the English sentence 'To live is to love God' is the following: Vivere est amare Deum. The word-by-word translation is as follows: 'vivere' means 'to live'; 'est' means '[it] is'; 'amare' means 'to love'; and 'Deum' means 'God'. The pronunciation is the following: VEE-veh-ray ehst ah-MAH-ray DAY-oom.
The Latin word for eternal love is aeternus. It is easy to find simple translations online at places like Free Translation.
Amor.
Near as I can tell... the word "sacrifice", by itself, in latin is "sacrificio". As a verb, the words "to sacrifice"is "facio". You should verify this though.
Vos amo.
Hic est amor.
Pugnatores amoris.
Amo vitam.
Semper amor.
Amor et cupiditas.
Amor est caecus.
Amare monstrum.
Pro amore, pro vita, 'for love, for life'.
its french for i want your love i want your revenge i want your love