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Ego diligo Deus means I love God in non-grammatical Latin and Laus Deus Semper means "Praise God Always"
I will love you for all the time
Ego mos diligo vos pro vita is a Latin quote that is used often. It means I will love you for my life.
It means someone put "love me as i am" into one of those on-line translators. They turn out garbage, and that's what this. In this case, what came out actually translates to "I esteem for myself as I am".
I love you. Yes, it could be that - but diligo is a much milder word that amo, the best latin word for 'love.' Diligo is more like 'hold dear, esteem, have regard for.' Also, note that the 'you (vos)' is plural, the word order is atypical, and the use of the pronoun unusual. Most likely, somone put 'I love you' in one of those unreliable online translators and got that out. Best for 'I love you' is: Te amo.
It means that someone has been using an online translator that produces garbage. In this case, what was put in was "I will love again", but what came out means "I, the custom, I esteem once more".The original English phrase may be translated into grammatical Latin as rursum amabo.
"Ego pecuniam quaero." means 'I (ego and quaero) seek (quaero) money/wealth (pecuniam).'
This is string of Latin words turned out by an online translator, which in all likelihood bears little resemblance to the English sentence that served as its input. It literally means "In life I, the custom, produce that which I value, in death I, the custom, toil above", although even there the grammar of in nex is wrong.
When the ego is your god This is an incomplete sentence but it looks like a title to something.
Ego in Latin means I
ego vita sum means i am alive in english. ego means I. vita means alive. sum means am. Ego Bonus pectus!!!
The word "ego" in English translates to "yabang" in Tagalog.