This is latin, not spanish. It means "Hail Caesar, we who are about to die salute you."
The poem is Morituri Salutamus (We who are about to die salute you) but it finishes with those lines, not starts with them. It starts: "O Caesar, we who are about to dieSalute you!" was the gladiators' cry
Caesar Salad is healthy and very good for you.
Julius Caesar is a name, which means it is a noun. So you use it as a noun in a sentence. For example, "Julius Caesar was a great general" or, "The man who reformed the calender was Julius Caesar".
Caesar means KING.
Caesar crossed the Rubicon and started a civil war. Caesar was the one who reformed the calendar. I'll have a Caesar salad. All three of the above sentences use Caesar (obviously). Caesar is a name which makes it a noun, except in the last sentence which makes it a proper adjective.
The likely word is caesar, meaning emperor. The name is capitalized when it refers to one of the individuals bearing the title, e.g. Julius Caesar, Augustus Caesar.The common word close in pronunciation is seizer, one who grabs or seizes.
The saying "ave Caesar morituri te salutant" (usually translated as: Hail, Caesar, those about to die salute you") was supposedly the traditional salute to the Roman emperor by gladiators in the arena. It was first recorded by the Roman historian Suetonius (c71-130a.d.) in his "Lives of the Twelve Caesars" probably written around 120 a.d.
Augustus Caesar shares few commonalities with the guy on pizza boxes; in fact, a pair of olive branches and a toga are about it. Augustus Caesar was an emperor of Rome and the grand-nephew of Julius Caesar.
Julius Caesar's cognomen was "Caesar," indicating his prestigious family lineage.
A senator murdered Julius Caesar.
The verb in the sentence "Have you ever seen the play Julius Caesar by William Shakespeare?" is "have seen". It is divided as such compound verbs are in the interrogative, but would be re-united in the response, "Yes, I have seen Julius Caesar."
Several auguries were revealed to Caesar before his death.