The verb "to rest" is requiescere. The corresponding noun is requies (genitive requietis, sometimes requiei, f.). The "rest of" something is reliquus, -a, -um. Note that Latin doesn't say "the rest of something"; reliquus is an adjective that agrees with the noun, and is used more or less like the English adjective "remaining": reliquum diem, "for the rest of the day [the remaining day]".
et cetera
To say "Who am I?" in Latin you can say "quisnam sum Ego?"
How do you say determined in Latin?
my is "mihi" in latin
"Sī placet" is how you say "please" in Latin.
"The rest of the moon" is reliqua luna.
nemo malus felix- translates to "peace does not visit the guilty mind"
requiem
"et alia" abbreviated "et al" is the standard way to say "and the rest".
you say helmet in latin (casco)<- in latin
et cetera
Requiesce in me.
To say "Who am I?" in Latin you can say "quisnam sum Ego?"
How do you say determined in Latin?
The phrase is "et cetera". It means "and the rest", or "and so on".
infitialis is the word we say in latin
To say the word lightning in Latin, a person would say the word "ignis." To say thunder in Latin, the word is "tonitrua."