The expression "est operae pretium" is used, with the infinitive of a verb as the subject, to mean that the action of that verb is worth while, as in operam dare operae pretium est; studying is worth doing. Omnia vincit amor is another, unrelated expression meaning love conquers all things.
The English translation for the painting, 'Amor Vincit Omnia' is "Love Conquers All". The language itself is written in Latin. Amor means love. Omnia means all things, or everything. Vincit means to win or conquer, in third-person.
Uma grande quantidade de amor. Bastante amor. Amor às pampas. Amor até sair pelo ladrão.
Tu amor is Spanish for: Your love
prefix amor means: love; like
'love from' - Com amor love - amor
Amor Vincit Omnia - album - was created on 2009-03-09.
The cast of Omnia vincit amor - 1970 includes: Ellen Rathsack
No, the pilgrim who wears a brooch with the inscription "Amor vincit omnia" is the Prioress, not the Nun's Priest.
The English translation for the painting, 'Amor Vincit Omnia' is "Love Conquers All". The language itself is written in Latin. Amor means love. Omnia means all things, or everything. Vincit means to win or conquer, in third-person.
Amor vincit omnia....Love conquers all
Amor vincit omnia
Amor Vincit Omnia is the latin.
Love conquers everything, so let us yield to love is the English equivalent of 'Omnia vincit amor et nos cedamus amori'. In the word by word translation, the noun 'omnia' means 'everything'. The verb 'vincit' means '[he/she/it] conquers, does conquer, is conquering'. The nouns 'amor' and 'amori' mean 'love'. The conjunction 'et' means 'and'. The personal pronoun 'nos' means 'us'. The verb 'cedamus' means '[we] yield'.
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Amor vincit omnia = love conquers all !
William Woods University's motto is 'Amor Vincit Omnia'.
The phrase "Love conquers all" is itself a translation from Latin: it comes from the Tenth Eclogue of the Roman poet Virgil (P. Vergilius Maro), where it appears as Omnia vincit amor.Since Latin uses case endings to indicate grammatical function, rather than relying on word order as does English, Latin word order is very free (particularly in poetry). Consequently any of the following orders is possible, and all are equally "correct" from the grammatical point of view:omnia vincit amoromnia amor vincitamor vincit omniaamor omnia vincitvincit omnia amorvincit amor omnia