I don't know about breath, but i know that the word "animus" is Latin for soul.
The root word "anima" comes from Latin and means "soul" or "life force." It is often used to refer to the essence or spiritual aspect of a person or living being.
The prefix "anima" means soul or spirit. It is often used in words related to life, breath, and vitality.
In various philosophical and religious beliefs, pneuma, or the breath of life, is often seen as essential to the existence and vitality of the soul. It is believed to be the life force that animates the soul and connects it to the physical body. The concept of pneuma highlights the interconnectedness of the physical and spiritual aspects of human existence, emphasizing the importance of breath and vitality in understanding the nature of the soul.
The Latin root anim- "breath, spirit" is the source of a number of English words, including "animal" (that which has breath), "animation" (spiritedness), "inanimate" (lacking breath or spirit), and "equanimity" (even-mindedness).The related Greek root anemo- can be found in the English word "anemometer" (a device for measuring wind speed).
This is in Latin, and one of the few translations in English is "with heart and soul."
It is either animale of animalis check http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/animal
The root word "anima" comes from Latin and means "soul" or "life force." It is often used to refer to the essence or spiritual aspect of a person or living being.
The origin of the word is the Latin animale, meaning any living being that breathes, including humans. This in turn is from the Latin anima, meaning breath or soul, or a current of air.
Some names that mean "soul" are: Psyche (Greek) Anima (Latin) Enid (Welsh)
The word animal comes from the Latin word animale, neuter of animalis, and is derived from anima, meaning vital breath or soul.
Anima is a Latin equivalent of the English word "soul." The feminine first-declension noun in its nominative singular form as the subject of a phrase or sentence also translates as "air," "breath," "breeze," "life" and "spirit" according to English contexts. The pronunciation will be "A-nee-ma" in Church and classical Latin.
Latin Soul Syndicate was created in 2003.
English - Latin Soul Eater - anima comedentis Soul Glutton - gulosus anima
"Whose soul", in the accusative case (the object of a verb).
A:A ghost, in folklore, is a lost soul.Hebrew words for breath and wind were also used in the Bible to mean 'soul'.
what makes a living soul is the breath of life from god.
anima