to come, go
Venio Losert was born on 1976-07-25.
planto is venio
In latin I am coming? is: 'Ego Venio?'
the Latin word for come is 'venio'
veni venimus venisti venistis venit venerunt
Flag bearer Venio Losert (opening) Damir Martin (closing)
"Venis" means "You Come"."Venis" comes from the 4th Conjugation Verb, Venio, which means "To Come".Four Principle Parts of Venio:Veniō, Venīre, Vēnī, Ventum.The Present Tense Conjugation of Venio:Singular1st Person: Venio (I come)2nd Person: Venis (You come)3rd Person: Venit (He, She, It comes)Plural1st Person: Venimus (We come)2nd Person: Venitis (You [plural] come)3rd Person: Veniunt (They come)
Croatia (CRO) Venio LosertIvano BalićDomagoj DuvnjakBlaženko LackovićMarko KopljarIgor VoriJakov GojunZlatko HorvatDrago VukovićDamir BičanićDenis Buntić
to come and to live=venire et vivare I come and live=venio et vivo You come and live=venias et vivas He/she it comes and lives=veniat et vivat
venio means come.
Exactly how you wrote it-- venio means "I come" and "veni" means I came or I have come video means "I see" and "vidi" means I saw or I have seen vinco means "I conquer" and "vici" means I conquered, or I have conquered. so yeah, "veni, vidi, vidi" is how you say "I came, I saw, I conquered" in Latin.
It means someone thinks an online translator can actually translate English to Latin.It's absolute garbage - mostly meaningless Latin words thrown together, with a random English word (down) that the translator didn't even try.It's so garbled that there's no way to guess what the original English was, but to provide just one example of how this translator works, it turned the words "all is well" into totus est puteus - which actually means "the well [i.e., the thing in the ground that you draw water out of] is whole".