Ego ahve fuerit penetravit multa
The Latin phrase "mens candida" translates to "pure mind" or "clean mind" in English.
The Latin equivalent of 'thoroughbred' may be generosus. The Latin term tends to be translated as 'of noble birth'. But a more exact equivalent may be de genere puro. This Latin phrase tends to be translated as 'of a pure breed'. In the word-by-word translation, the preposition 'de' means 'from, of'. The noun 'genere' means 'kind, type'. The adjective 'puro' means 'pure'.
the pure rotation is something which has no translation motion actually people has a confusion that rolling is pure rotation? but i want to clarify that rolling is a combination of translation and rotation motion
Whenever you see the words ego mos in what purports to be a Latin sentence, it's almost guaranteed to be the output of a particular "translation" web site that produces about 98% pure garbage. Do not trust it. (Ego mos indicates that the words "I will" appeared in the input.)In this case, the Latin words mean "to you [plural] I custom"
Pure gold represents her true, faithful love for Romeo.
"reines Wasser" is the translation.
Pure, guiltless, chaste.
Literal translation for Plata Pura is 'pure silver'
A possible translation is inimă curată.
It's pure Latin - 'with praise'.
It originates from the Latin word pure.
Either Junko or Kiyoko (both translate as pure child). They are girls names.