"I love therefore I am"
As opposed to amare, which is "to love" in a romantic or affectionate sense, diligere tends to mean "to value highly, to have esteem for". It can be used without a direct object, but such use is relatively rare.
Pando ergo sum is Latin for "I bend, therefore I am."(Pando can also mean "I spread out; I extend", but in this meaning it requires a direct object.)
Sum ergo ago.
cogito ergo sum
It's Latin for "I gather, therefore I am."
Amo ergo sum.
ergo or igiturThe most commonly seen ergo is in Descartes' famous statement, Cogito, ergo sum, which means I think, therefore I am.
I think therefore I am, cogito ergo sum. (Descartes)
You can use any of the following really. Proinde, itaque, igitur, ergo, ideo. Ergo being the more well known. Cogito, ergo sum = I think, therefore i am, as used by Decartes.
The Latin equivalent of 'You think therefore you are' may be Cogitas ergo es. Or it may be Cogitatis ergo estis. In the word-by-word translation, the verbs 'cogitas' and 'cogitatis' respectively mean 'you' and 'you all'. The adverb 'ergo' means 'therefore'. The verbs 'es' and 'estis' respectively mean 'you are' and 'you all are'.
No, the phrase "I think, therefore I am" comes from the philosopher René Descartes, not Plato. Descartes used this statement to emphasize the certainty of self-awareness and existence as a thinking being in his work "Discourse on the Method."
It means "I am a Roman Citizen". The main verb of the whole sentence goes often goes at the end.. in this case "sum" which is "I am" as in "Cogito ergo sum" which is "I think, therefore I am" Romanus = Roman Civis = Citizen
"Ergo et sum" is Latin and translates to "Therefore, I am." It is commonly associated with the phrase "Cogito, ergo sum" which means "I think, therefore I am," a philosophical concept introduced by René Descartes to affirm one's existence based on the act of thinking.