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It's Latin for "Be Strong".
"Sine" is Latin for "without"."Optimus" is Latin for "the best".
Optimus Maximus means the "biggest and greatest" in Latin. Used by ancient Romans; refered to "Jupiter Optimus Maximus"
Optimus Maximus means the "biggest and greatest" in Latin. Used by ancient Romans; refered to "Jupiter Optimus Maximus"
Some words built from the Latin root primus are: primary, primate, primarily.
You can be absolutely certain that anything that begins with the words Operor non is not an actual Latin sentence, but rather the output of a certain online "translation" site that produces these words when presented with an English text that begins "Do not . . .". It might be possible to work out the entire English sentence that induced this site to produce the above string of Latin words, but that wouldn't remotely constitute a Latin-to-English translation, since the Latin is essentially meaningless.
This is what happens when you put the English phrase "Peace be to you" into one of those God-awful online English to Latin translators. They turn out nothing but garbage, and that's what this is. It translates to: Of peace I step forth to you (plural).
Capáx or Peritús are the words which mean efficient in Latin.
These words do not exist in Latin.
The words are Medieval Latin and mean, literally, Great Charter
There are several Latin words meaning "vigorous":vigens, validus, acer, fortis, strenuus.
no