No, Ditat Dues is a Latin word that means God Enriches. Ditat Dues is Arizona's state motto.
Ditat is the third person singular form of dito, ditare which means 'to enrich'. Deus is a nominative form of dues, di which translates to God. The phrase itself, 'Ditat Deus' translates to 'God enriches' and is the motto for the State of Arizona.
The English equivalent of the Latin phrase 'Ditat Deus' is the following: God enriches. The word-by-word translation is as follows: 'ditat' means '[he/she/it] enriches'; and 'deus' means 'god'. The pronunciation is the following: DEE-taht DAY-oos. The phrase is the motto of the state of Arizona, in the United States of America.
Ditat deus means God enriches
Jim has not paid his club dues yet.
Ditat Deus or God enriches.Arizona became the 48th state on February 14, 1912. The state motto is the Latin phrase Didat Deus, which translates to God enriches.
duties, dues, tolls
Dues
The Arizona state motto is Ditat Deus, Latin for "God enriches." It was conceived by Richard Cunningham McCormick, Secretary of the Arizona Territory in 1863.
Cotisations des milices.
Ditat Deus (God enriches).
On the Great Seal of the State.
Hello everybody my name is none of your beeswax im kidding. The state motto for Arizona is Ditat Deus in latin and God Enriches in english im doing this for my state report on californa