"It is what it is", and that's Latin.
Latin for: "It is what it is."
Id est quod est.
"It is what it is" in latin is: "Est quod est" - literally "is what is", you skip the pronouns because the verb forms already denote the gender and number. "Id est quod id est" - "it is what it is", not skipping the pronoun automatically puts an emphasis on it. The stress is on "it". Careful with "is". "Is" is the masculine pronoun. answer found at: http://sites.google.com/site/latinaidnow/
The English equivalent of the Latin sentence 'Id quod factum est infectum esse potest' is the following: What has been made can be corrupted. The word-by-word translation is as follows: 'id quod' means 'what'; 'factum' means 'done, or made'; 'est' means '[he/she/it] has been'; 'esse' means 'to be'; and 'poteste' means 'power'. The word 'infectum' has a range of literal and extended meanings, from 'colored, dyed, imbued, stained, steeped, tinged' to 'corrupted, poisoned, tainted'.
Ie in Latin means 'id est' which in English means 'that is' or 'in other words'
Quod amas id.
The usual expression is simply "Opus est" (It / that is needed), as pronouns such as "id" (it) are usually omitted in Latin, because they are redundant with the tense of the verb.
The usual expression is simply "Opus est" (It / that is needed), as pronouns such as "id" (it) are usually omitted in Latin, because they are redundant with the tense of the verb.
The Latin phrase is "id est," commonly abbreviated "i.e." in English usage.
Latin for "that is" is "id est" and the anagram used in English writing is "i.e."
It is Latin for id est. It means 'for example'. It also means 'that is'.
Nothing. It's an abbreviation for the Latin, "id est," which means "that is."
If you mean the conjunction, it's "that's.""That is" can also be abbreviated as "i.e." which is "id est" in Latin.