absentia
In the absence of light darkness prevails
in abstentia
In absentia is Latin for "in the absence". In legal use it usually pertains to a defendant's right to be present in court proceedings in a criminal trial.
"In the absence of light, darkness triumphs."(However, luci should be lucis and vinciuntshould be vincunt. As it stands, the Latin actually says "in the absence for light, darkness binds".)
The English translation to the Spanish word Ausencia is absence. The etymology is from the Old French absence and from the Latin absentia. It's a state of being away from a place.
A short leave of absence from a Boarding school.It comes from the Latin exeat which means let him go out.
The word "silence" originates from the Latin word "silentium," which means the absence of sound or noise.
The word peace evolved through time from the Latin word, pacem. Pacem meaning a treaty, or absence from war. See the related link for more.
Cari/o. Depending on context, could also be a/trophy (absence of nourishment) or Necr/o (death - of tissue)
The Latin word absum is equivalent to the English words " to be absent".
Afebrile. A- means without. Febr- is the prefix in medicine that means fever, from Latin. Febrile means there is a fever or something related to fever. A similar word from the Greek uses the prefix, pyr-, meaning fire, and is pyrexia (fever).
Sognando in assenza is an Italian equivalent of the mixed English and Latin phrase "Dreaming in absentia."Specifically, the gerund sognando is "dreaming." The preposition in means the same in English, Italian and Latin. The feminine noun assenza translates as "absence," which is the English meaning of the Latin noun absentia.The pronunciation will be "so-NYAN-do ee-nas-SEN-tsa" in Italian.