Quiet in Latin is, as a noun: quies or silentium ... as a verb: pacare ... as an adj: placidus or tranquillus.
I'm sure there are many other, but those are the only ones I know.
The word "quiet" originated from the Latin word "quietus," which means "peaceful, calm, at rest." This Latin word eventually evolved into the Old French word "quitte," which then became "quiet" in the English language.
"Peace" is an English equivalent of the Latin word "pax."Specifically and by extension, the word also may mean "calm, quiet, serenity" or "grace." The Latin word is a feminine gender noun. The pronunciation is "pahks" according to the liturgical Latin of the Church and the classical Latin of the ancient Romans.Peace
Dormant, from the Latin word, sleeping, is often used for volcanoes and faults that are now quiet.
Dormant, from the Latin word, sleeping, is often used for volcanoes and faults that are now quiet.
"Pax" is a Latin equivalent of "peace."Specifically, the Latin word is a feminine gender noun. It also may be translated as "calm, grace, quiet, serenity." But regardless of the meaning, the pronunciation always is "pahks."Pax is the Latin word for Peace.
tacite
Tacitum
It means "be quiet"
the base word for quiet is quiets'
A Quiet Word With ... ended in 2011.
A Quiet Word With ... was created in 2010.
The duration of A Quiet Word With ... is 1560.0 seconds.