Mecum carpe diem
carpe diem
To say "have a nice day" in Latin, you can use the phrase "habeas diem bonam."
The English word that comes from the Latin word prehendar is apprehensive.
The exclamation "carpe diem" is Latin for "cease the day. " An example of "carpe diem" in a sentence is "The terminally ill man adapted a carpe diem attitude in order to make the best of the time he has left. "
The Year We Seized the Day was created in 2007.
In Pig Latin, the word "daddy" would be "add-day."
og-day
The answer to that is : appy-hay other's-may ay-day
In Pig Latin, you would say Happy Valentine's Day, "Ap-Hay-y-pay, al-Vay-en-yay-ine's-tay, ay-Day."
"Malae diem" I belive (Malae = Bad, Diem = Day)
In Latin, you can say "Diei benedictus esto" to wish someone a blessed day. This phrase translates to "Be blessed on this day" in English. Latin is a highly inflected language, so the word order can vary without changing the meaning significantly.
If stolen yes, if seized legally (say as a debt or by the police) no.