Metella sits.
It means 'Metella is in the atrium/main room.'
"Metella and Quintus [proper names] are dead."
"Metella est mater" translates to "Metella is the mother" in English. It is a simple Latin sentence where "Metella" is a proper noun, "est" means "is," and "mater" means "mother." This phrase could refer to a character named Metella, possibly in a literary or historical context.
Metella is the mother Caecilius is the father Quintus is the the son
Malia Metella was born on February 23, 1982.
Malia Metella was born on February 23, 1982.
Malia Metella is 29 years old (birthdate: February 23, 1982).
It should be sedet aeternumque sedebit infelix Theseus :: cursed Theseus sits, and will forever sit
Sedet is a Latin verb. There are a handful of possible meanings, but the most common meaning is "he/she/it sits" [from sedeo, sedere, sedi, sessus; 3rd person singular active indicative] -------------- However, if the verb were actually the first conjugation verb sedo, then sedet would mean he/she/it may/must/should settle/calm down
My trusty Google tells me this is a fill-in-the-blank question where a third word, a verb, is wanted, "Metella mercatorem ________".Metella is a feminine proper name in the nominative case, and so is the subject of the missing verb. Mercatorem is the Latin word for "merchant" and is in the accusative case, as befits the direct object of the verb.What the verb itself is, isn't for me to say.
Some are sedimentary, sedative, sedentary, sedan, and sediment
He/she/it sits is the English equivalent of 'sedet'. It's the third person singular form of the present indicative tense. Other translations are 'He/she/it does sit, is sitting'.