Infans.
Star Child
dog poo
Do you mean the Latin translation of the English word child? Liberi, liberorum/liberum (usually used in the plural). Not to be confused with the adjective liber, libera, liberum (free), the noun liber, libri (book), or the nouns libertus, liberti (freedman) and liberta, libertae (freedwoman).
Desiderius Erasmus
A Latin equivalent of the English noun 'top' is turbo. Its literal meaning is 'a movement in a circle, a whirling round, an eddy'. But one of its looser translations is 'a child's top'. Other Latin equivalents are cacumen and culmen, both of which refer to 'the top, the summit'.
Protect this child in Latin is "Protege puer iste."
Star Child
The phrase "moon child" in Latin can be translated as "luna filius" for a boy or "luna filia" for a girl.
The Latin root word for child or offspring is "filia" for a daughter, or "filius" for a son.
tuus infantus
Child is 'pedo'. We see this often in pediatrics or orthopedics.
Puer salus
Ryu = dragon Ko = child Ryuko =dragon child I THINK this is right x This is wrong in two ways: 1. its not latin, its japaese 2. Ryuukoo means "dragon & tiger"
In words that come from Greek the prefix ped- stands for "child."
dog poo
puer is a boy puella is a girl
a child/infant is parvulus Child (offspring) is liber