Profundum means "deep." I can't find any trace of a word belitor.
In reality, nothing. It's what's known as dog latin, latin-seeming phrases that only work if they're 'translated'. What it is MEANT to be is, 'Always in excrement(shit, that is), only the depth varies.'
This is a not-quite-successful translation of "We are always in excrement, only the depth varies."The main problems: excretum is not really "excrement"; alta is "[the] depths" (i.e., deep places), not the quality "depth"; sed is "but" or "however".A better translation would beSemper in merda sumus; altitudo solum variat.There are several Latin words for excrement, of varying degrees of politeness. The most basic is merda, which gave rise to the common Romance words; the Romans themselves used stercus"dung, manure" as a term of abuse; for the more fastidious there's excrementum, although this word has a more general application in Latin than in English (Tacitus uses it for spittle and mucus).
It mean what you don't what does it mean.
Mean is the average.
he was a mean person who lived with mean people in a mean castle on a mean hill in a mean country in a mean continent in a mean world in a mean solar system in a mean galaxy in a mean universe in a mean dimension
What does GRI mean? What does GRI mean?
The correct usage is "what DOES it mean"
The haudensaunee mean irguios
No, but sometimes "average" means "mean" - when it doesn't mean median, geometric mean, or something else entirely.
Present - I mean, She means. Future - I will mean, She will mean. Past - Meant.
He is as mean as a copperhead snakeHe is as mean as an angry bearHe is as mean as a bottle of brandyHe is as mean a black woman
as you do