i know taht this comes a bit late, but non ignoravi suppsed to mean " i knew way too well", since ignorare means - to not know
so non ignoravi means i didn't not not know - therefore i knew way exactly, or i knew way too well that...
The Latin root for death is "mort" or "mors."
mort
The Latin word "mort" or one of its inflected forms, which meant "dead" or "die".
It means: If not, you are dead!!! It can also translate to: "If not, you died", or "If not, you have died"
From Bartleby.com: ETYMOLOGY: Middle English morgage, from Old French : mort, dead (from Vulgar Latin *mortus, from Latin mortuus, past participle of mor, to die; (see mer- in Appendix I) + gage, pledge (of Germanic origin). See the links below.
I would imagine mort or morte, meaning dead
im-mort-talee-bus (the 'u' in 'bus' is pronounced like the 'u' in 'push')
In French, that phrase means "The animal died screaming at me I am afraid."
"Mort", or "death". The word "mortify" means "torture", but the context is more "self-inflicted torture".
The Latin root word for "immortal" is "immortalis," which comes from the combination of "in-" (meaning "not") and "mortalis" (meaning "mortal" or "subject to death").
Mort is a Mouse Lemur
Cynthia Mort's birth name is Cynthia Ann Mort.