Ad art Luna et tergum-to the moon and back in Latin
Ad astra et ultra
Illuc retroque.
"It gives back"
Ab initio = from the beginning
after warafter warafter warawsomely after warafter war again
Donec iterum conveniant fratrem
Riddit (how it should be spelled) means he/she/it gives back.
re= back or again Latin splendeo= to shine
Oddly enough, it's English. It does, however, have roots in Latin. "Retro" means "back" or "again", and "spect" is part of the word for "look". So literally, it's "looking back" or "looking again".
It comes from retineo, (I keep or hold back, etc) from re- (again) and teneo (I hold, to hold).
A prefix, occurring originally in loanwords from Latin, used with the meaning "again" or "again and again" to indicate repetition, orwith the meaning "back" or "backward" to indicate withdrawal or backward motion
Iterum
If the person is talking about Mary I then she changed the prayer book back to Latin and also that the POPE was the head of Church Of England again
The Western calendar comes to us from ancient Rome. Many of our days and months still retain the names given by the Romans.Monday comes from Old English, 'Monandaeg', 'Day of the Moon', and traces back through French, Italian and Spanish to Greek (selenes) and Latin (Lunae).Tuesday is from Old English, 'Tiwesdaeg', from Proto-Germanic 'god of the sky' + 'day', eventually tracing back to Greek (Ares) and Latin (Mars).Wednesday is again from Old English, 'Wodensdaeg', 'Woden's Day', going back again, eventually, to Latin (Mercury) and Greek (Hermes).Thursday is from Old English, 'Purresdaeg', 'Thor's Day', once again tracing back to Latin and Greek (Jupiter, and Zeus).Friday is from Old English 'Friggedaeg', 'Frigga's Day', back again to Latin (Venus) and Greek (Aphrodite).Saturday is again Old English, 'Saeterdaeg' or 'Saeternesdaeg', 'day of the planet Saturn', going back to Latin (Saturn) and Greek (Sabbath). The Sabbath connection goes through to Swedish and Old Norse terms for 'bath day'.Sunday is Old English, 'Sunnandaeg', 'Day of the Sun', again back to Latin and Greek.The division of our Western calendar into days, months and years, is reliant on the Gregorian calendar, named for Pope Gregory XIII (1502 - 1585) and introduced on February 24, 1582 (see link, below). The Gregorian calendar included a reform of the Julian calendar, introduced by Julius Caesar in 46 BC, and was particularly concerned with recalculating the dates for Easter.
non iterum
Retrieve is from the Latin re- (meaning again) and trouver (meaning to find). Recupere = To retrieve in Latin
It comes to us by way of the French, from the Middle Latin word renegare, which in turn comes from the Old Latin prefix re- (again) and negare (to deny; also the root for the word negate).In other words, to renege means to go back on a promise, to literally deny someone again.
Revisere.
iterum in Latin is translated to of the journeys