to which place, to which
Quo vadis? in Latin is "Where are you going?" in English.
Quo abis, parvule? in Latin is "Where are you going, little one?" in English.
Not on its own but it is a Latin word and is used as a prefix or suffix in parts of English words such as:- quid pro quo (means something for something) status quo (means keeping the balance)
"Quo" in Latin is either a form of the interrogative and indefinite pronoun quis/quid or of the relative pronoun qui/quae/quod, or an adverb derived from these. It can be translated into English in various ways depending on how it's used:in quo vadis ("where are you going?") quo is "[to] where?"in status quo ("the state in which") quo is "in which"in quid pro quo ("something for something") quo is "something"in fortius quo fidelius ("stronger because more faithful") quo is "because" (compare English "in that")
present era
The Latin phrase 'Ex quo omnia mihi contemplanti' is incomplete. The phrase becomes a sentence, with the Latin word 'sunt' added at the end. The word-by-word translation is the following: 'ex' means 'from, out of'; 'quo' means 'which'; 'omnia' means 'all'; 'mihi' means 'to me'; 'contemplanti sunt' means '[it] ought to be contemplated'. The English translation therefore is as follows: Literally, From which all things ought to be contemplated by me; by extension, From which I ought to contemplate all things.
Status quo.
You mean quo vadis.Quo means (to) where?Vadis means literally you (singular) are goingIn English: where are you going?
Translated from the Latin, it means, "I said what I said".
The English word for the Latin word "portare" is "to carry."
The English word for the Latin word "credere" is "believe."
The English word for the Latin word "cord" is "heart."