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Well translated it means "the immortals" which is used as a word like good gracious, but a true translation (sorry if this is hard to follow, you would probably need to read a greak mythology book) would be "the gods" as in the Greek Gods of Mythology, i learned this from the book Percy Jackson and The Olympians: The Lightning Thief, im happy 'cause those books got me interested in greek mythology :)

Correction to the above: It's Latin, not Greek!

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13y ago
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10y ago

Correction: It means in Latin, "The Immortal Gods!" It's the vocative (denoting address) case. "Di", is a contraction or another way of saying "Dei", which means "Gods". It has nothing to do with the Italian "di", which has a completely different meaning. Do not let that confuse you. I hope this answered your question.

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Q: In English what does Di Immortales mean from Ancient Greek?
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