It is a language and a culture. Therefore, it is a proper noun and should be capitalized.
Siempre is definitely not a Latin word. It is modern Spanish for "always". It derives from the Latin word semper.
ever or alwaysIt means "always".Semper is a Latin word that is very similar to the Spanish word "siempre" which means "always".
Whether or not the words 'semper' and 'sempre' are interchangeable depends upon the context in English. The word 'semper' is Latin for 'always'. The word 'sempre' is Italian for 'always'.
No it is not.
The English phrase or idea of "never ending" translates into a single Latin word. That word is the Latin "perpetuus".
The Latin word for lead is plumbum. Because of this, the abbreviation for lead has always been Pb. The word plumber also stems from here.
There is no such word in Latin.The nearest is semper, which means always.
The Latin word "is" means "he." It is the nominative form, which means that it is used to represent an indefinite masculine person/thing as a subject, so it always means "he" and never "him" or "his."
The latin word for always is semper and the Latin verb to love is amare so to love always would be semper amare but I don't know how you want that translated it would change based on what you mean by it
The Latin equivalent of 'Always a gentleman' is Semper homo generosus. In the word-by-word translation, the adverb 'semper' means 'always'. The noun 'homo' means 'man'. The adjective 'generosus' means 'generous'.
It is a proper noun, and proper nouns are always capitalized.
The English translation of the Latin phrase 'semper intentus' is Always stretched, always thorough. In the word-by-word translation, the adverb 'semper' means 'always'. The past participle 'intentus' means 'stretched, thorough'.