Through difficulties and stars.
Ardua ad astra is a Latin equivalent of the English phrase "adversity to the stars."Specifically, the feminine adjective ardua means "arduous, difficult, hard to reach, laborious" in this context. The preposition ad means "to." The neuter noun astrameans "stars."The complete phrase is Per ardua ad astrum ("Through adversity to the stars") and serves as the motto of the Royal Air Force (RAF) of the British Armed Forces.
a priori
toto caelo
tabula rasa
"Transmutata vitae" is a Latin phrase basically meaning "transfer of life."
'Per Ardua' is Latin . It is part of the motto of the Royal Air Force, "Per ardua ad astra" , meaning 'Through hardships to the stars'.
The roundel does not have a Latin meaning, however the Motto has a Latin meaning. It is " Per Ardua ad Astra " - -" Through hardships to the stars "
The literal meaning of ardua is something like difficulties, challenges, but it is best known in the saying Per ardua ad astra, which is best translated as Through adversity to the stars. This is the motto of the British Royal Air Force.
Ardua ad astra is a Latin equivalent of the English phrase "adversity to the stars."Specifically, the feminine adjective ardua means "arduous, difficult, hard to reach, laborious" in this context. The preposition ad means "to." The neuter noun astrameans "stars."The complete phrase is Per ardua ad astrum ("Through adversity to the stars") and serves as the motto of the Royal Air Force (RAF) of the British Armed Forces.
The Motto of the RAF is "Per Ardua ad Astra" which translates as "Through adversity to the stars".
There are three well known pieces of literature that uses the phrase 'ad Astra per aspera.' It was used in Hermann Hesse's Beneath the Wheel, Harper Lee's To Kill a Mockingbird and James Joyce's A Portrait of the Artists as a Young Man.
Astra is the Latin word for star. That is where the first part of the words astronomy and astrology comes from.
The motto of the Royal Air Force is "Per Ardua ad Astra", translated as "Through Struggle to the Stars" (or more literally through adversity). The RAF inherited the motto from its predecessor, the Royal Flying Corps.
The Latin phrase meaning "for example" is exempli gratias, abbreviated e.g. The phrase's literal meaning is "for the sake of example."
The Latin plural noun meaning "stars" is stellae, astra or sideria.
Ad hoc.
a priori