Desire Does Not Rest
The Latin equivalent of 'Rest when I die' is Requiesce quando morior. In the word-by-word translation, the verb 'requiesce' means 'rest'. The dependent conjunction 'quando' means 'when'. The verb 'morior' means '[I] die'.
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]".
It's Latin and means Rest In Peace.
The English meaning of the Latin word 'centum' is hundred. Latin is a language that tends to have separate feminine, masculine and neuter forms of words. It's also a language that tends to use case endings to show the relationship of the parts of speech to the verb and to the rest of the sentence. But 'centum' is a exception. For that's the word's only form no matter what.
requiem
Requiesce in me.
"The rest of the moon" is reliqua luna.
The phrase is "et cetera". It means "and the rest", or "and so on".
rest in peace
Et cetera - and the rest.
Desire Does Not Rest
"et cetera", which means "and the rest"
requiesicat in pace <3 x
Primarily Greek, about 64 the rest are German, Spanish, Latin, and Americanized Latin.
You spell it "Etcetera", for the latin meaning "The rest or The others".
The Latin equivalent of 'Rest when I die' is Requiesce quando morior. In the word-by-word translation, the verb 'requiesce' means 'rest'. The dependent conjunction 'quando' means 'when'. The verb 'morior' means '[I] die'.