Ahrs-dihk-TAH-mee-nees is the pronunciation of 'ars dictaminis' in the classical Latin of the ancient Romans. Ahrs deek-TAH-mee-nees is the pronunciation in liturgical Latin. Either way, the phrase means 'the art of dictating'. In the word by word translation, the noun 'ars', which is the feminine nominative singular as the phrase's subject, means 'art, method, skill'. The noun 'dictaminis', which is the neuter genitive singular of possession for 'dictamen', means 'act of dictating'.
Martin Camargo has written: 'Ars dictaminis, ars dictandi' -- subject(s): Letter writing, Medieval Rhetoric 'Medieval Rhetorics of Prose Composition'
It would be pronounced pretty much as it looks -- ars noh-vah.
Ars.
Latin for strategy is ars imperátória
Ars, artis ( as in ars longa, vita brevis) is a Latin word from which derives the English word art. A better modern equivalent to the Latin meaning, however, is science or technology.
I think it is ars
Ars (artis, f.)
the latin root ars means "art" answer found at: http://sites.google.com/site/latinaidnow
The full phrase is ars gratia artis, "art for art's sake."
That sounds like "Ars Subtilior" (Latin for 'subtler art'), a musical style popularized in late 14th century France.
ars, artis
Ars Gratia Artis Founded in 1924, MGM operated under the motto "Ars Gratia Artis", a Latin phrase meaning "art for art's sake".