This is the phrase "as you like it" as mangled by an online English-to-Latin translator. It actually means "As I like you he".
It means that someone typed in the phrase "Are you in to win" at one of those automatic translation sites, and this is what it came out with. Unfortunately, the string of words es vos in ut lucror is not an actual Latin translation of that phrase, from the point of view of either grammar or meaning. An actual transaction would be Inesne ut vincas?(For the morbidly curious, es vos in ut lucror actually means "you [singular] are you [plural] in as I gain".)
I would need to know what you mean by 'Father Me'. In my reading of standard English, I would find it hard to follow 'father' with 'me'. Do you mean 'My Father'?
This is a word-for-word translation into Latin of "I love you so much", but it is not actually a grammatical Latin sentence. A better translation would be Ut maxime te amo ("How very much I love you").
It is Latin for 'Serve the Lord'.
That the grandfathers ... is the English translation of 'ut proavi'. In the word by word translation, the adverb 'ut' means 'in order that'. The noun 'proavi' means 'grandfathers'.
It means that someone has decided to try translating an English sentence into Latin without first learning any Latin.Taken one at a time, the words in quam es vos totus can be translated as "how", "are", "you" and "all", but they don't go together to form an intelligible Latin sentence.- quam can mean "how" but is not used in asking questions (Quam pulchra es! "How beautiful you are!")- es is "are", but it is singular, and does not agree with the plural vos- totus is "all" in the sense of "whole, entire"; also, it's singular and thus can't modify vos.If you really want to say "How are you all?" in Latin, a much better way is Ut valetis omnes?
In order that the following is the English equivalent of 'ut posterus'. In the word by word translation, the adverb 'ut' means 'in order that'. The adjective 'posterus' means 'following, future, subsequent'.
Death as a school is the English equivalent of 'nex ut schola'. In the word by word translation, the noun 'nex' means 'death [usually violent]'. The adverb 'ut' means 'as'. The noun 'schola' means 'school'.
traduzir para português ut severis seges
g-om-ut-ery
Beforehand
UT = Utility Player or someone who can play multiple positions, such as in the infield or outfield