Biblia.
The best-known, and now standard, Latin translation is called the Vulgate (in Latin, Biblia Vulgata). It was written by Jerome around A.D. 385-404. There are a number of surviving manuscripts of earlier translations now collectively known by the name "Old Latin."
Vulgate is a Latin translation of the Bible by Saint Jerome.
The first Latin translation of the Bible is known as the Vulgate. It was translated from the original Hebrew and Greek manuscripts.
Tyndale translated the Bible into English from a Latin translation; the Bible was originally written in Hebrew and Greek.
John Wyncliffe first translated the Bible from Latin to English under special permission but it was not allowed to be read. William Tyndale's English translation of the Bible in 1523 was a pioneer work and an independent effort. Much of his translation is used in the King James Version of 1611.
Original answer: "No, the word Rapture is not in the Bible, but it is the word we use for catching away which is found in the bible. It is our descriptive and is valid to use."The word "rapture" is not found anywhere in the EnglishBible, but it is found in the Vulgate, the Latin translation of the Bible, where it is translated from the Greek Word that means "caught up, swept away". That's where the term is found.
The Latin translation for the word migrate as a verb is migrare.
Latin doesn't have a word for "the"
The Latin translation for Brass is Orichalcum.
AnswerThe Latin translation of the Bible by Jerome is called the Vulgate.
what is the translation into latin for In the beginning was the word
Jerome.
Vulgate is a Latin translation of the Bible by Saint Jerome.
Latin doesn't have a word for the. It lacks articles. Thus, "a" "an" and "the" are not in Latin.
Furtim is the Latin word for "by stealth"
Creator is both the English and the Latin word.
None that I have found. It is a Latin verb found in the Latin Vulgate and was used in that translation in 1 Thess. 4:17. The English translation is rapture and that word is not used in the Bible anywhere.
Ecclesia.