Voces in capite meo.
From head to heel, I love you.
Neelin High School's motto is 'Cum Manu et Capite'.
St. Tarcisius was buried in the cemetery of St. Callistus, and his relics are claimed by the church of San Silvestro in Capite.
Capite is Italian for "to understand/understood" In North America it has morphed into capishe or capiche. It means the same thing. It is spelled capisce.
nex, mortalitas, mors mortis, letum, plecto aliquem capite, excessum, decessus
You can write the word "Death" in latin various ways. Commonly, one would use mortis (or mortuus, depending on the declension) as the word for Death. Other ways could be the following: nex, mortalitas, mors mortis, letum, plecto aliquem capite, excessum, or decessus.
The Latin word for a chapter of a book is caput or capitulum.The same word was used in medieval monasteries for the Chapter-house where all the monks gathered every day at around 7 am. At this meeting business was discussed, important decisions made, faults and sins were confessed and punishments imposed; also at each meeting a chapter of the Rule of St Benedict was read out to remind the monks of their responsibilities and vows.
To say the words death or glory in the Latin language you say mortis et gloriae. To say this phrase in Italian you say la morte o la Gloria.Death or glory in Latin should be "Mors aut Gloria." "Mors" refers to "death," "aut" refers to "or," and "Gloria refers to "glory."
"To understand" in English is comprendere in Italian. The present infinitive also translates literally as "to comprehend" in English. The pronunciation will be "kom-PREN-dey-rey" in Italian.
The singular Sì, capisci! or the plural Sì, capite! informally and the singular Sì, capisce! or the plural Sì, capiscono! formally are Italian equivalents of the English phrase "Yes, you understand!" Context makes clear whether one listener (cases 1, 3) or more (examples 2, 4) from the speaker's close circle of family, friends and peers (instances 1, 2) or among those senior in age and status or unknown to the speaker (options 3, 4) suits. The respective pronunciations will be "see ka-PEA-shee" or "see ka-PEA-tey" informally and "see ka-PEA-shey" or "see ka-PEA-sko-no" formally in Pisan Italian.
"Do you understand?" in English means Capisci? in Italian.Capisci? is one Italian equivalent of the English question "Do you understand?"Specifically, the word is a verb in the present indicative. It is in the form of the second person informal singular "you" (tu). The pronunciation will be "ka-PEA-schee" in Italian.