it means the time goes bye fast
time flies
time flies
it means Time flies
Well, I heard of time flies like an arrow, fruit flies like a banana. This is a pun meaning a fruit fly likes bananas.
Tempus fugit is latin and means 'time flies'
"Time flies" means that time seemed to pass very quickly.
Simply by itself 'tempus fugit', meaning 'time flees', is an entire sentence. I'd translate it as 'time flies', though to conform with the cliché, although it is not the literal translation. If you want to use it as part of a larger sentence, simply substitute the two Latin words where you would normally put the two English words 'time flies'.
The phrase "Time flies" could mean that time passes quickly, or it could refer to the act of throwing a clock.
The correct phrase is "time flies". This idiom is used to express how time seems to pass quickly.
That saying means that time elapses so fast it is like an arrow which flies through the air at a fast rate of speed. But, I believe that saying has a second part to it which is "fruit flies like a banana." It is supposed to be a play on words, because flies in the first part is a verb and flies in the second part is a noun.
The idiom "time flies" means that time seems to pass quickly. It would be possible to compare time to a bird, since birds fly.
Time to get a screen or close the front door.