"Ergo" is a Latin word that means "therefore" or "consequently." It is often used to introduce a logical conclusion or inference based on preceding statements or arguments.
Ergo, as a preposition, means on "account of" or "because of." And as an adverb "therefore."
"Ergo" is latin for "therefore".
Usually ergo would mean work. But depending on the context many would use ergo as a sentence connector, similar to hence and therefore. In informal ways ergo could mean ergometer or ergograph. The former measuring muscle power and the latter measuring the work done when a muscle contracts.
Pando ergo sum is Latin for "I bend, therefore I am."(Pando can also mean "I spread out; I extend", but in this meaning it requires a direct object.)
You probably mean ludis ergo es, which means "you play, therefore you are" (singular "you"). Ludes is "you will play".
The Latin equivalent of 'You think therefore you are' may be Cogitas ergo es. Or it may be Cogitatis ergo estis. In the word-by-word translation, the verbs 'cogitas' and 'cogitatis' respectively mean 'you' and 'you all'. The adverb 'ergo' means 'therefore'. The verbs 'es' and 'estis' respectively mean 'you are' and 'you all are'.
urbem is Latin for city, the root of the word is the noun urbs, city (ergo: the English word urban)
Ergo; igitur; itaque.
Ergo; igitur; itaque.
if 'thus it' means therefore then ERGO if 'thus it' means therefore then ERGO if 'thus it' means therefore then ERGO
Ergo; igitur; itaque.
ergo or igiturThe most commonly seen ergo is in Descartes' famous statement, Cogito, ergo sum, which means I think, therefore I am.
The most common choice for a Latin equivalent to the English 'therefore' is ergo. The Latin term most often is rendered into English as 'accordingly,' 'consequently', 'then', or 'therefore'. This is its use as an adverb. The word 'ergo' also has a use as a preposition. In that use, it's translated as 'on account of, because of'.