There is no root "ite." There is a root "iter, itineris" meaning a road or pathway: Itinerary, itinerant. There is the root "iter" meaning again: iterate, iteration. There is the suffix "-ite" meaning an inhabitant or an adherant; also "-ite" meaning a salt or acid whose adjectival form ends in -ous.
It ends in -ite
no word has est est est
yes it is
fa-vor-ite 3 syllables
"Ite, missa est,"
Pax vobiscum, if if I recall, is "peace be with you". Many use it interchangeably with "go in peace"
The Mass before 1962 ended with the dismissal, "Ite missa est" (Go, you are sent or Go, it is ended) followed by the Last Gospel (the beginning of the Gospel according to St. John ("In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God...."). In the Mass after 1962, in the new English translation (which you have not yet heard in your parish): ... along with "Ite, missa est," the Latin phrase now translated as "The Mass is ended, go in peace," the new options are: •"Ite ad Evangelium Domini annuntiandum" (Go and announce the Gospel of the Lord). •"Ite in pace, glorificando vita vestra Dominum" (Go in peace, glorifying the Lord by your life). •"Ite in pace" (Go in peace).
Dirt - 2007 Ita Missa Est 1-13 is rated/received certificates of: USA:TV-MA
You must be thinking of the Latin Ite missa est from the old Tridentine formula. I believe this means Go, you are dismissed. Go the mass has begun is not said at the end of the vernacular mass, either.
The word "Mass" has its origin in Latin, from the phrase "Missa est" which means "dismissal" or "it is sent forth." This term refers to the dismissal of the congregation at the end of the Catholic liturgy.
At the end of a Mass, we are sent forth with a blessing to go out into the world and live out our faith by loving and serving others. This sending forth is known as the dismissal or the "Ite, missa est" in Latin, which means "Go, it is the dismissal."
The Dismissal: The options were outlined by Cardinal Francis Arinze of the Congregation for Divine Worship and the Sacraments at the Vatican, in an interview published in the Oct. 17 issue of L'Osservatore Romano, the Vatican newspaper. Along with "Ite, missa est," the Latin phrase now translated as "The Mass is ended, go in peace," he said the new options are: -- "Ite ad Evangelium Domini annuntiandum" (Go and announce the Gospel of the Lord). -- "Ite in pace, glorificando vita vestra Dominum" (Go in peace, glorifying the Lord by your life). -- "Ite in pace" (Go in peace).
Benitoite is pronounced "beh-nee-toh-ite."
Shunammite
dum vita est spes est
HOW DO YOU PRONOUNCEBRONCHITIS?Pronunciation of bronchitis is...Bronk-ite-iss,Blaize