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"Credo et" means "I believe and." "Spera" is a form of the verb "hope," but it is the imperative, as if you are telling someone else to hope. I would not be surprised if the phrase you meant to quote were "Credo et spero"--"I believe and I hope."
"Credo" in Tagalog means "pananampalataya" or "paniniwala," which both translate to "belief" or "faith." It is often used to refer to a statement of beliefs or principles.
The Latin word meaning Believe is Crédere. Credo I believe.
Credo is a Latin word meaning "to trust" (e.g. credit, credentials), but cardio comes from the Greek word καρδία, meaning "heart". Now, that didn't quite answer your question, but I'm doubt that, based on the definitions and morphology, they do actually come from the same root.However, the Latin word for "heart" is cors, cordis, so one would imagine that both the Latin and Greek for "heart" have a similar etymology (at some point in the past).
'Credo' has its root in 'Latin', and means 'belief'. .
Synonyms for credo may be code, creed, philosophy, or tenet.
a callous remover. implement meaning tools, implying to credo blade.
Credo line was created in 2008.
Credo Reference was created in 1999.
The Filipino translation of "credo" is "pananampalataya." In English, "credo" translates to "belief" or "statement of principles or beliefs."
The duration of Credo - film - is 1.45 hours.
"Paniniwala" is the Filipino translation for "credo."