The Latin word for mother is mater. On the other hand, the Latin word for father is pater. The Latin word for brother is frater.
"Mom and Dad and brother" in English is Mater et pater et frater in Latin.
Yo mom and dad and your aunty
his mom and dad are devorced and his dad lives out of town.
Mother in latin is mater and father is pater.
I held mom and dad's hands.
yes if it is a letter it would be capitalized
Amor Mama y Papa
The proper way would be to said 'are mom and dad'.
Writing something "from" her dad would not only be presumptuous, but pretty silly -- especially if you have to ask what to write. It is not your job to pretend to be her dad. It is your job to be the best mom possible.I would write whatever I felt personally, and then assure her that her dad would have been proud of her, and that you wish he could be there to see her graduate.
Your dad's mum and dad are your paternal grand parents, they are your granddad and your grandma.
Not that I know of, because her mom's Irish and her dad's Mexican American.
You capitalize mom and dad when you use it as their name. For example - "Hey Mom/Dad, can I have a ride? It's not when you say, "My mom is cool."The rule is basically this.... If you can insert their given name, Joan or David, for example into the sentence, you capitalize it, because you would capitalize their given name if it were used. If you cannot use (properly) their given name in the sentence, you do not capitalize mom or dad. For example: "My mom and my dad grounded me for a week because I was bad." In this instance you would not capitalize mom and dad because inserting their given names, say Joan and David, would not be correct. For example: "My Joan and my David grounded me for a week because I was bad," is not a correct sentence and thus when using mom and dad in that instance you would not capitalize them. You would capitalize mom and dad in the following sentence because you can use their given names properly and would capitalize them so you would capitalize mom and dad. "One time, at band camp, Mom and Dad came by to hear us play." You can use Joan and David properly in this sentence, so you would capitalize Mom and Dad.If you are referring to your mom in a generic term and are saying "my mom," "his mom," "their mom," etc, no. If you are referring to her by Mom being her name, yes.Example: Today, my mom picked me up from school.Example: Today, Mom picked me up from school.