"Regina Austri" would seem a suitable translation. A good precedent can be found in Daniel 11 in the Vulgate Bible (the 5th-century Latin translation of St. Jerome), which refers to rex Austri, "the king of the South" and rex Aquilonis"the king of the North".
The Latin word for 'queen' is Regina. It's a feminine gender noun. But that isn't the word that's used in regard to 'queen bee'. In Latin, the phrase is 'rex apium'. In the word-by-word translation, the noun 'rex' means 'ruler'. The noun 'apium' means 'of the bees'.
The Latin translation for Brass is Orichalcum.
aculeus
parasitus
signum.
Pirata regina.
The Latin word for 'queen' is Regina. It's a feminine gender noun. But that isn't the word that's used in regard to 'queen bee'. In Latin, the phrase is 'rex apium'. In the word-by-word translation, the noun 'rex' means 'ruler'. The noun 'apium' means 'of the bees'.
The latin translation for handbill is libelus
The Latin translation for Magnetism is Magnetismus.
Spelled: "prinses" pronounced: with the stress on the "ses" syllable.
The Latin translation for confederate is Foederátus or Socius.
The Latin translation is rose_ann_a the a is like a in ape
The Latin translation for Brass is Orichalcum.
Sorry, there is no latin translation, try your last name.
The Latin translation for the word migrate as a verb is migrare.
The English translation of the Latin greeting 'Salve, Regina' is the following: Hail, Queen. The word-by-word translation is as follows: 'salve' means 'hail'; and 'regina' means 'queen'. According to classical Latin, the pronunciation is the following: SAHL-way ray-GEE-nah. According to liturgical Latin, the pronunciation is as follows: SAHL-vay ray-DJEE-nah.
eximia