The adjective sedulus, sedula, sedulum (masculine, feminine and neuter) means attentive or painstaking.
The form sedulo would be the dative or ablative of the masculine or neuter form of this word, which depends entirely on the noun it describes - without the accompanying noun it makes little sense. It would be like saying (in English):
with the attentive ......
by an attentive ........
to the attentive .........
for an attentive ........
All of these are possible, and there are more possibilities. Without the noun it is impossible to be more precise.
"Possibility" is one of the possible translations of the Latin word potestas (also "power; ability").
The English word "hope" actually has 11 different possible Latin translations. Four of the more common are the words spero, spes, praesumptio, and votum.
Life as a few possible translations in the Latin language. One would be the word "vita" for existence. Another would be "anima" for spirit.
The Latin word for bun is comburet. Combustum and combustio can also be Latin translations for the word burn.
in hebrew: milev (mee, lev) a construct word
The English word "mercy" actually has several possible Latin language translations. Possibilities include: misericordia, clementia, indulgentia, eleemosyna, elemosyna, and elemosina,
The simplest translation for dederunt is "They gave". Other possible translations could be: "They surrendered", "They furnished" or even "They delivered"
There are two Latin translations for the English word "concentrated". One is the word "conuenerunt" and the other is the word "saturatus".
The English word "simplify" has two simple Latin translations. One is the word "aliquam" while another is the word "simplifico".
The Latin word geometria means to measure the earth.
agilis id one of the translations, although there are a few others.
The Latin translation for the word terrible is terribilis. Other translations that can mean the same thing are horrendus, horribilis, and atrox.