Apparently it means "Daughters of Job". Job's name usually appears in Latin as Job or Iob ('j' and consontantal 'i', both pronounced like English 'y' in "yellow", are interchangeable in Latin spelling). Iyob looks like a closer approximation of the Hebrew spelling אִיֺּוב.
Puellae sunt filiae reginae.
Meae filiae.
Filiae Lunae
"filiae" is the nominative plural of "filia."
Mother gives a bull to the daughters since they supposedly love animals
P L U R A L filiae (nominative) filiarum (genitive) filiis (dative) filias (accusative) filiae (vocative) filiis (ablative)
Chatham University's motto is 'Filiae Nostrae Sicut Antarii Lapides'.
its the word for daughter in latin. filia, filiae f. is the dictionary listing. filia is the nominative, and it basically means a daughter or the daughter (as the subject of a sentence)
In Latin, you would pronounce it fee-lee-eye loon-eye. In English, you can pretty much say it any way you want. For common Latin words used in English, there is often a "way" to say them, as in sine die. In Latin, sine die is sin-ay dee-ay, but legislatures everywhere say sign-ee die (referring to the last moment of a legislative session).
filia, filiae - daughter nata, natae - daughter puella, puellae - girl or young woman (Use the first version for singular, the second for plural.)
The motto of Rainey Endowed School is 'Sal Sapit Omnia'.
1. Eurydice, the women loved by Orpheus, will die on the day of her marriage. 2. Prosperpina fatum filiae suae retexere temptavit, et poterat; Orpheus idem Eurydicei facere temptavit, et non poterat. 3. Her friends carried the girl about to be received by the king to the palace.