"Sigillum" means seal, "militum" means soldiers or army, and I believe "Xpisti" is one spelling of the Latin name of Christ. So if I am reading this right, "Sigillum Militum Xpisti" would mean "The Seal of the Army of Christ" (appropriate, since I believe the phrase was used mainly by the Knights Templar).
a fortiori
The latin phrase De minimis may be what you mean.
Never give up on you
are your meaning Per se? It's a Latin phrase meaning "in itself"
Ante is the Latin word for before and delictum is Latin for offense. The phrase ante delictum means before the offense.
This is not a correct Latin phrase. It appears to be a mixture of random Latin words.
A Seal of the Knights Templar, with their famous image of two knights on a single horse, a symbol of their early poverty. The text is in Greek and Latin characters, Sigillum Militum Xpisti: followed by a cross, which means "the Seal of the Soldiers of Christ". A closer translation would be "The Seal of a Soldier of Christ".
The Latin phrase for bad faith is mala fides. The Spanish phrase for these words is mala fe and the Italian phrase is malafede.
The phrase 'epic world' translated to Latin as 'heroicis mundi'
"Ex officio" is the Latin phrase that means "by virtue of his office."
method of removing is the latin phrase of modus tollen
Est.
what Latin phrase means ultimate source Fons en origo
what does the Latin phrase ''Si Hoc'' mean
The translation into Latin is a priori.To read more about this Latin phrase on Answers.com, see the Related Link.
The Latin phrase is Cui bono? Usually it implies that something underhand or secret is going on.
The phrase "get lost" in pig-Latin is "et-gay ost-lay."