The Vulgate. just took the test answer is c. vulgate
The Vulgate is an early Fifth Century version of The Bible in Latin, and largely the result of the labours of Jerome, who was commissioned by Pope Damasus I in 382 to make a revision of old Latin translations. It became the definitive and official Latin version of the Bible of the Roman Catholic Church.
The most commly know latin translation is the Vulgate by Jerome. There were earliar translation of scripture in the old Latin, some time before Jerome. The Scriptures were widely available throughout the Italian peninsula going back to the end of the first century and shortly thereafter, copies started to appear in Latin.
AnswerThe Latin translation of the Bible by Jerome is called the Vulgate.
The first Malayalam translation of the Bible is known as the "Ramban Bible," completed by Bishop Phillipose in 1811.
Sorry, there is no latin translation, try your last name.
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."
The name Patricia is not from the Bible. It comes from the Latin word for noble.
The latin translation for Leek is Allium porrum.
The Latin name for Ireland is Hibernia.
Catholics most often refer to the Bible as "The Holy Bible". The official version of the Catholic Bible is the Latin Vulgate, the most accurate translation of the Bible ever done. In English, the most accurate version is the Douay Rheims translation, though one can get the Challoner version as the English is rather archiac in the original.
Catholic AnswerThere is no "Protestant Bible". The Bible translation most commonly used by protestants is the Authorized Version, commonly known as the King James Version, which is the name of a translation of the Bible. The Bible is a whole collection of books, and as such does not have a name. The early Church used the Septuagint for their Old Testament, and had many different scrolls in Latin and Greek for their New Testament Scriptures. The first "official" Bible, as in one continuous book was The Vulgate which was a translations of all the Scriptures by St. Jerome in the fourth century. The closest thing that the Catholic Church has in English is the Douay-Rheims translation, which was made about the same time as the Authorized Version.
King James of Scotland hence the name of the King James version of the Bible.
The name bible in Latin is biblia.
nomen illi mors= "his name [was] Death." This is from the Latin Vulgate translation of the Bible, and refers to the rider on the pale horse of Revelation 6:8.