This is the sentence "the world will not hear you" as filtered through a certain online translation site. The result is poor Latin: mos is a noun, and cannot function as a future-tense marker, while audite is a plural imperative (the command "hear!" addressed to more than one person). Orbis terrarum("the circle of lands") is an idiom meaning "world", but it tends to be applied literally, and not as a metaphor for "mankind". Vos is the plural form of "you".
Assuming that the sentence is addressed to one person, a better translation would be mundus non audiet te.
"DEE mos"
Cast - Stephen Fry as Narrator / Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy Martin Freeman as Arthur Dent Zooey Deschanel as Tricia McMillian/Trillian Mos Def as Ford Prefect Sam Rockwell as Zaphod Beeblebrox Bill Nighy as Slartibartfast Anna Chancellor as Questular Rontok John Malkovich as Humma Kavula Warwick Davis (Alan Rickman, voice) as Marvin the Paranoid Android Helen Mirren as Voice of Deep Thought Thomas Lennon as Voice of Eddie the Computer Kelly Macdonald as Reporter Richard Griffiths as Voice of Jeltz Bill Bailey as Voice of The Whale
MOS Military Occupational Specialty
Más o menos = more or less.
Intelligence Specialist
I means Mom Over Shoulder
It is short for "Most Definitely", which is also what he uses as his website e-mail address. Hence; Mos Def....
The phrase is in Latin...It means:I will check some it's then he will knowHope this helps!
An 8511 Military Occupational Specialty (MOS) was for Marines serving as Marine Corps Drill Instructors.
MOS is Military Occupational Speciality, and I believe the T is an indication that the service member is still in training, as opposed to MOSQ, which indicates that they are qualified in their MOS (i.e., have completed training in their career field).
The MOS of 812 designates a heavy weapons man, in particular an nco. This was effctive July 1944 for the US Army.
"Marked Out of Stock"-for merchandise damaged on the sales floor.
You can be pretty sure that any sentence containing the words ego mos is not actual Latin, but rather a pseudo-translation produced by an online translator. This sentence is no exception. Ego mos literally means "I, the custom", and motuodoesn't exist at all.
It is MOS 1141.