Mane.
The phrase "this morning" is an adverbial phrase, not an adverb. It includes the adjective "this" and the noun "morning."
Stella is a Latin equivalent of the English phrase "a star."Specifically, the Latin word is a feminine noun. It is not preceded by a definite or indefinite article since Latin has no equivalent to "the" or "a." But it may be preceded by una in the sense of "one": una stella ("one star").The pronunciation will be "STEHL-lah" in both the classical Latin of the ancient Romans and the liturgical Latin of the Church.
Mane.
This is not a correct Latin phrase. It appears to be a mixture of random Latin words.
"Good morning" is an English phrase.
It's the short form of the Latin phrase 'Ante Meridian' - meaning before noon. PM is short for 'Post Meridian' meaning after noon.
"in the morning", "on the table", "at college", etc.
The Latin phrase for bad faith is mala fides. The Spanish phrase for these words is mala fe and the Italian phrase is malafede.
Latin has several ways of expressing "morning":manematutinum tempusprima lux
Mane.
method of removing is the latin phrase of modus tollen
"Ex officio" is the Latin phrase that means "by virtue of his office."