A more common phrase is "Dona nobis pacem" or "Give us peace"
It should be "miserere nobis" = "Have mercy on us"
if you mean Exit bis diem, it means "he goes out twice a day"
Latin and the word it's derived from is bis source:Cambridge Latin Course Unit 1
In Latin: cantare est bis orare ("to sing is to pray twice")In Spanish:
It means Twice daily after meal. BD originated from Latin 'Bis die' PC originated from 'Post cibum' AC originated from 'Ante cibum'
It is bis die (BD), a latin term meaning twice per day. It means you take the medication twice a day.Twice a day (also abbreviated: b.i.d.)
Nothing. That's like asking what's the "th" mean in "the". Or more appropriately, like asking, "What does cuit in biscuit mean?" Nothing, sometimes a biscuit is just a biscuit.
until sometime
Until.
If these words are spelled correctly, you have something very odd here. Bis in Latin means "twice." Lo is an obscure word which is apparently cited only once from a late source, where it appears as a magical word intended to cure the bite of a mad dog.
meaning: "not twice for the same".
This isn't french