It means "I am lazy", although according to the Oxford Latin Dictionary, the 'i' in ignavus is not long.
In Latin, "I am death" can be translated as "Ego sum mors." The word "ego" means "I," "sum" means "am," and "mors" means "death." So when combined, the phrase "Ego sum mors" conveys the message "I am death" in Latin.
Ego sum tibi.
To say "Who am I?" in Latin you can say "quisnam sum Ego?"
"Ego sum malus."
ego . You can also say "Sum" which means I am.
sum
agricola sum, or sum agricola, or ego sum agricola agricola = farmer sum = I am ego = I
"Sum me."sum ego is correct (the objective pronoun me is not to be used as a predicate nominative).
"i am invincible" in Latin is "ego sum invincible"
Sorry it should be I AM THE SOLUTION
I am a painter. (With the "I' emphasized.)It also can mean I am the artist. But painter is the same thing. It depends what you are translating. If you are translating a passage about the pictor going to a villa and painting a lion in the triclinium, use painter but if it is just 'ego sum pictor' the answer would be I am an artist. (articles are EXTREMELY important!
Tu es in french translates to latin as just 'es'. In latin I am is just sum; ego sum is tautological. Similarly 'you(singular) are' is not written 'tu es'.