The English equivalent of the sentence 'Quod me nutruit me destruit' is What nurtures me destroys me. In the word-by-word translation, the relative conjunction 'quod' means 'what'. The personal pronoun 'me' means 'me'. The verb 'nutruit' means '[he/she/it] nourishes, nurtures'. The verb 'destruit' means '[he/she/it] destroys'.
Quod me nutrit me destruit : [what feeds me destroys me] quod te nutrit te destruit : [what feeds you destroys you] (one person] quod vos nutrit vos destruit: " " (more than one person)
The English equivalent of the Latin sentence 'Quod me nutrit me destruit' is the following: Whatever nourishes me destroys me. The word-by-word translation is as follows: 'quod' means 'what'; 'me' means 'me'; 'nutrit' means '[it] nourishes, nurtures'; 'destruit' means '[it] destroys'. And the pronunciation is the following: Kwohd may NOO-triht may DEH-stroo-iht.
Ut quod doesn't iuguolo mihi planto mihi validus
It means "What nourishes me also deystroys me"
Age Quod Agis Means Do What You Are Doing
quod Deus bene vertat = "may God grant success"
The Latin word quod has the basic meaning "that" and can be used in a number of different ways.In the phrase eris quod sum (see link below), it has the meaning "that which" or "what" so that the whole phrase means "You will be what I am".Quod can also be a conjunction meaning "in that" or "because", so that the phrase quod sum, if taken by itself, can mean "because I am".
Because I hold/have, I will hold/have.
"Because you were guardians"
Quod dixisti? (= What did you say? in Latin)I think you mean 'me gusta' = I like
God created man and woman.
"It is what it is", and that's Latin.