Long live (Vive) the (diu) king (rex).
Actually it's: Live (Vive) long (diu) the king (rex)
Actually it is Long live the king; when you translate to another language you need to put the words in the order that is appropriate to the target language, not follow the order in the source.
I am the king
The phrase 'La vive' may mean the bright [one]. In the word-by-word translation, the definite article 'la' means 'the'. And the adjective used as a noun 'vive' means 'bright'; 'lively, vivacious, vivid'; 'fierce, heated'; 'keen, sharp'; or even 'brisk'.
"vive les XXX" means 'long live XXX" in French; 'peuerels' has no meaning in French.
"Vive la Liberté" means 'long live Liberty' or 'Hooray for Freedom' in English.
The Spanish phrase 'vive en' means [he/she/it] lives in... . In the word-by-word translation, the verb 'vive' is the third person singular form in the present indicative tense. And the preposition 'en' means 'in'.
I am the king
For a long time.
"El vive" translates to "he lives" in Spanish.
The airport code for Diu Airport is DIU.
francia
Strong Life
this is where i live The phrase "este donde mi vive" means nothing. Make what you will of the following words. Este = This Donde = Where Mi = My Vive = He Lives
"Aqui vive" in French translates to "Ici habite" in English, which means "Here lives" in English.
Diu Fort was created in 1535.
Buth Diu died in 1972.
The phrase 'La vive' may mean the bright [one]. In the word-by-word translation, the definite article 'la' means 'the'. And the adjective used as a noun 'vive' means 'bright'; 'lively, vivacious, vivid'; 'fierce, heated'; 'keen, sharp'; or even 'brisk'.
This is Cantonese. Diu means fnck Leih means You Chau means stink/stinky si fat means Ass/Butt So diu leih chau si fat means fnck your stinky ass.