My friend’s father has died and he would like me to translate one sentence to remember him. However I only did Latin in high school and can’t remember that much! I have, however, attempted a translation and any corrections would be greatly appreciated.
The sentence is: “My dear and beloved daddy, you will always be in my heart and may you now rest in peace”
which I have attempted to translate as: “Patre meus care, semper in corde me eris, iam requiescas in pace”
I have no idea whether “you will always be in my heart” is something typically said in Latin, or whether something like “semper te in memoria tenebo” would be better. I have benefited from some of the discussions on this board already but just would like to check because I may have translated wrongly. Any help is appreciated.
O mi care et dilecte pater, semper mihi cordi eris et iam in pace quiescas.
You could take or leave the “et” and divide these into two sentences. You could also probably leave out the “O” if wished.
Your translation was quite good for someone having not studied Latin for some time. I think “to be in my heart” may be translated very felicitously with “mihi cordi esse.” Because this is an important translation, here are some sources I used to double check myself:
Tata is the Latin equivalent of English “daddy”, whereas pater is just “father”. Pater might be more appropriate for a memorial, though. I guess it depends on how personal your friend wants it to be.