He/she/it hurried towards the battle.
Call To War
"We are in great danger. You should return to the fight."
The phrase means "for valor or courage"
'to the finger nail'
"Ad lib" is short for the Latin phrase "ad libitum," which means "at one's pleasure" or "at will." In performance or presentation, doing something ad lib means doing it spontaneously or without prior preparation.
The Latin phrase ad pulchra means literally "for beauty".
The phrase means "ready for the sea"
The Latin phrase is ad infinitum, and it means that something goes on and on and on. In other words, the same as "etcetera", or "and so on".
No, "ad verbatim" is not a correct phrase in Latin. The correct phrase would be "ad verbum," which means exactly, word for word.
"ad" isn't an abbreviation here. It is Latin and means as much as "to" or "until". So "ad infinitum" means something like "until infinity" or "neverending".
Lehitraot ad Mahar BaErev (להתראות מחר בערב) = "See you tomorrow evening"Answer:The preposition "ad" indicates that it is being used to mean "goodby until tomorrow evening."
The Latin word interim, all by itself, means "meanwhile" or sometimes "nevertheless". In correct Latin it is an adverb, not a noun, and never occurs after the preposition ad ("to; towards"). Despite this fact, the phrase ad interim is used in modern languages to mean "temporary; for the meantime", probably by false analogy with the grammatically proper ad hoc, literally "to this".