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We believe that the documents he has placed before us are less clear to us now than are other documents of this kind is the English equivalent of 'Litterarum anteposuerit claram parum putamus nunc quam eiusmodi nobis'.

In the word by word translation, the noun 'litterarum' means 'of the documents, the letters'. The verb 'anteposuerit' means '[he/she/it] will have placed before, will have preferred'. The adjective 'claram' means 'bright, clear, distinct'. The adverb 'parum' means 'little, small', 'not enough, too little', or 'of the companions, the equal things, the even numbers, the pairs'. The verb 'putamus' means '[we] cleanse, consider, estimate, judge, value'. The adverb 'nunc' means 'already, now'. The relative pronoun 'quam' means 'as, how, than' or 'whom'. The adverb 'eiusmodi' means 'of the same kind' and 'so, thus'. The personal pronoun 'nobis' means 'to us'.

However, he does not specify the day is the English equivalent of 'Non nomum diem sed eligit'.

The adverb 'non' means 'not'. The adjective 'nomum' is a variant of 'notum', and both forms mean 'known'. The noun 'diem' means 'day'. The conjunction 'sed' means 'but, however, indeed'. The verb 'eligit' means '[he/she/it] chooses, does choose, is choosing; selects, does select, is selecting'.

Let him follow eagerly his goal[and] attain it is the English equivalent of 'Adipiscitur consectetur'.

The verb 'adipiscitur' means 'let [him/her/it] obtain, reach, overtake'. The verb 'consectetur' means 'let [her/him/it] follow, strive after'.

As he grows old, let the whip itself be [his] pain is the English equivalent of 'Dum amet sit dolor ipsum lorum'.

The conjunction 'dum' means 'while'. The verb 'amet' means '[he/she/it] does grow old, grows old, is growing old'. The verb 'sit' means 'let [her/him/it] be'. The noun 'dolor' means 'grief, pain, sorrow'. The intensive pronoun 'ipsum' means exactly, himself, itself, of one's own accord'. The noun 'lorum' means 'strap of leather'.

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Q: What is 'Litterarum anteposuerit claram parum putamus nunc quam eiusmodi nobis Non nomum diem sed elit Adipiscitur consectetur Dum amet sit dolor ipsum lorum' in English?
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What is 'Nos eiusmodi tinxerunt Laborent dolore magno erat voluptas' in English?

They've influenced us in this way. That they work while suffering from great pain was a pleasure[for us to know] is the English equivalent of 'Nos eiusmodi tinxerunt. Laborent dolore magno erat voluptas'. In the word by word translation, the personal pronoun 'nos', as the direct object of the verb, means 'us'. The adverb 'eiusmodi' means 'of this kind'. The verb 'tinxerunt', as the third person plural of the present perfect of 'tingere', means '[they] have moistened, have colored'. The verb 'laborent', as the third person plural of the present subjunctive of 'laborare', means 'if [they] work'. The noun 'dolore', in the ablative singular as the object of the preposition, means 'through grief, pain, sorrow'. The adjective 'magno', as the masculine form in the ablative singular, means 'great'. The verb 'erat', as the third person singular of the imperfect indicative, means '[he/she/it] was'. The noun 'voluptas', as the feminine form in the nominative singular, means 'pleasure, delight'.