Although it is often claimed to mean 'Service in peace and war', actually it should translate as: 'peace and also war are just' (are right, deserved, of value etc.) For 'merita' to translate as 'good service' it would be at the start of the sentence as: "Merita in pace ac bello" in a similar manner to 'requiescat in pace'
no
Frankie Pace was born in Italy.
Gayle Pace's birth name is Gayle Marvin Pace.
Orlando Pace's birth name is Orlando Lamar Pace.
requiescat in pace
Latin
how am i supposed 2 no? Requiescat in pace. (Rest in peace.) Latin. Look up "quotes" "Assassins Creed" and "Requiescat in pace" and you can find it.
The origin is Latin ' Requiescat in Pace
Requiescat in Pace (Latin which means- Rest in Peace)
requiescat in pace (rest in peace) pronunciation - reekweskat in pacheh
"In pace requiescat" translates to "rest in peace" in Latin. The irony lies in the fact that this phrase is often inscribed on gravestones or used in funeral settings, yet the deceased person cannot actually experience peace as they are no longer living.
The initials R.I.P. were at one time commonly seen on gravestones. They stand for the Latin phrase requiescat in pace [pronounced rek-wee-es-cat in pa-chay], which means "may he/she rest in peace".This term was definitely not used in Roman times and is mainly seen on post-medieval headstones, so the language is not classical Latin but Ecclesiastical Latin.Requiescat in pace, which translates (May [s]he) Rest In peace.Requiescat in pace.
It's spelled "requiescant in pace," and it's Latin for "may they rest in peace"--the R.I.P. on a gravestone (the singular form is "requiescat in pace," "may he (or she) rest in peace").
French : Repose en paixArabic: Orqud BisalaamItalian: Requiescat in PacheRequiescat in pace in Latin
What is probably meant is "Requiescat", which is Latin for "May he/she rest". Is usually part of the phrase "Requiescat in pace" which means "May he/she rest in peace", sometimes abbreviated RIP or R.I.P. and often seen on tombstones.
"May he (she) rest in peace" is an English equivalent of the Latin phrase Requiescat in pace. The phrase may be found abbreviated as RIP and written as Requiescat in pacem even though the latter will not be found in the Latin version of the Burial Service, Office for the Dead and Requiem Mass in the Liber usualis. The pronunciation will be "REY-kwee-EY-ska-teen PA-tchey" in Church Latin and "REY-kwee-ES-kat in PA-key" in classical Latin.