ego vita sum means i am alive in english. ego means I. vita means alive. sum means am. Ego Bonus pectus!!!
I'm guessing you pulled this out of an old bible hymnal or something. It means, "I am (sum) the way (via) the truth (veritas) and (y) the life (vita)." Ego is thrown in as an emphasis on the "I" in sum.
The English meaning of 'Ego sum. Vinco mea fortuna. Ego sum caput mei animi' is I am. I conquer my fortune. I am the head of my soul. In the word-by-word translation, the personal pronoun 'ego' means 'I'. The verb 'sum' means '[I] am'. The verb 'vinco' means ''[I] am conquering, conquer, do conquer'. The possessive adjective 'mea' means 'my'. The noun 'fortuna' means 'fortune'. The noun 'caput' means 'head'. The possessive adjective 'mei' means 'of my'. The noun ''animi' means 'of the soul'.
Ego sum patronus translates to "I am your patron/defender."
It means "I am a story." If one desired to say, "I am fabulous," on the other hand, one would say, "(Ego) mirabilis sum."
I am not a lion.
ego . You can also say "Sum" which means I am.
sum
All that I do is shed tears. I produce worthless thingsis the English equivalent of 'Lacrimas profundere est totus ego sum. Vilis efficio'. In the word by word translation, the noun 'lacrimas' means 'tears'. The verb 'profundere' means 'to pour forth, to shed'. The verb 'est' means '[he/she/it] is'. The adjective 'totus' means 'the entire, the whole'. The personal pronoun 'ego' means 'I'. The verb 'sum' means '[I] am'. The adjective 'vilis' means 'cheap'. The verb 'efficio' means '[I] am doing, effecting, making, producing; do do, do effect, do make, do produce; or do, effect, make, produce'.
This isn't a Latin phrase. It's one phrase and part of another.Ego sum means "I am"; salve mi is "Hello, my ...".
This phrase means "I am an omnipotent being".
ego amor is in the deponent form of the verb. unlike the other translations that give the active meaning, ego amor is passive. simply it means i am loved. the same thing as amatus sum means i am loved.
The sentence is a mix of five words in Latin, and one in English. The equivalent of the English word 'own' is 'proprius'. Therefore, the all-Latin sentence reads as follows: 'Ego sum meus proprius pessimus hostilis'. The English translation is as follows: I am my own worst enemy.