There's a translation for perfect, which is "perfectus"; however, there's not one for being.
The Latin translation for Brass is Orichalcum.
The word "perfect" comes from the Latin verb perficio.
aculeus
parasitus
signum.
he/she/it wounded. It is a 3rd person singular, perfect tense verb.
'Clan' in Latin is 'gens' [gehns], the plural being 'gentis' [GEHN-tis].
The latin translation for handbill is libelus
The Latin translation for Magnetism is Magnetismus.
The Latin translation for confederate is Foederátus or Socius.
The Latin translation for Brass is Orichalcum.
The Latin translation is rose_ann_a the a is like a in ape
Navigo is first conjugation Latin, the translation being "I am sailing." Latin verbs come with tense and person indicators, telling you who (I, you, he/she/it, we, you all, they) does it and when.
"perfectus, -a, -um". Nowadays the times used in English called present perfect and past perfect can be called perfectum and plusquamperfectum, too. Perfectum would stand for already "completely done", and plus quam perfectum would stand for "more than completely done" - as per definition, the past perfect happened even prior to the present perfect.
The Latin translation for the word migrate as a verb is migrare.
Sorry, there is no latin translation, try your last name.
eximia