Mortua est.
Latin for You are dead to me is: Mortuus es mihi. Or in English grammar Dead (you) are (to be in the state of) to me (da. "to me") or (you) are dead ("to me") me. The da. stands for the Dative case (to/for me), and the parenthesis indicate information or optional pronouns because you don't have to add pronouns in latin:) Another way to say this (totally optional), is Tibi mortuus es mihi ad, either one works:)
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.
Latin's a dead language. You don't say anything in it.
"Dead king" in English translates to "mortuus rex rgis" in Latin.
Honoris ille Mors
Caesar mortuus est.
It is spelt Sapientia. This is the feminine noun. No one speaks Latin as it is a dead language.
There is no word for the noun "aviator" in latin, as aviation is a concept which did not yet exist when latin became a dead language
videlicet, ut semper
dead angel in latin is : angelus mortuus dead angel in latin is : angelus mortuus
Latin is commonly known as a 'dead language' because no one currently speaks it as their native language (their first language, mother tongue, etc.). However, there are a small number of fluent Latin-speakers.
The Latin equivalent of the word "dead" is mortuus, -a, -um.
Latin speakers became dead.
Latin for You are dead to me is: Mortuus es mihi. Or in English grammar Dead (you) are (to be in the state of) to me (da. "to me") or (you) are dead ("to me") me. The da. stands for the Dative case (to/for me), and the parenthesis indicate information or optional pronouns because you don't have to add pronouns in latin:) Another way to say this (totally optional), is Tibi mortuus es mihi ad, either one works:)