the less said, the more great things
Ud=Ut dictum is a latin word, meaning "as directed"
It means a minus, in other words its a loss. It means a minus, in other words its a loss.
take away, minus
Capáx or Peritús are the words which mean efficient in Latin.
These words do not exist in Latin.
The words are Medieval Latin and mean, literally, Great Charter
A wedding is kind of dictum which mean formal in a way.
"Quid quid latin dictum sit altum sonatur"First of all, "Quid quid" is likely one word in this case. (Quidquid.)Quid means "what" and Quidquid means "whatever" (or anything.)The saying "Quidquid Latine dictum sit altum videtur" means"Anything said in Latin, sounds profound."(If you translate it more closely to the meaning of the actual Latin words, it translates like this: "Whatever, having been said Latinly, seems lofty." but Latin being translated as an adverb in English just sounds silly...)The word "Sonatur" likely comes from Sonare, which means "to sound" I've never seen it used in this saying before, but "Sonatur" could be used instead of "Videtur" (to seem) and the saying wouldn't change in meaning.Quidquid is one word, and Latin should be Latine (adverb ending) Otherwise, it doesn't make much sense. (Latina is the Latin word for Latin, so you would be misspelling it anyway...)
There are several Latin words meaning "vigorous":vigens, validus, acer, fortis, strenuus.
Never less alone than when alone.
no
amplius