In Latin, the phrase "bis in die" is pronounced as "bees in dee-eh." The 'b' is pronounced as in English, the 'i' is pronounced as a long 'e' sound, the 's' is pronounced as an 's' sound, the 'n' is pronounced as in English, the 'd' is pronounced as in English, and the 'ie' at the end is pronounced as 'ee-eh.'
Latin is a dead language so, technically, there is no Latin pronunciation.
Bis in die Spitzen was created in 2005.
Kwahn-DOH-kweh is the pronunciation of 'quandoque'. The pronunciation is the same in the liturgical Latin of the Church as in the classical Latin of the ancient Romans. The word serves as an adverb in a Latin sentence.
(Classical pronunciation.) WEER-gin-ay.
" Veneetay adoraamoos" is the pronunciation.
Latin and the word it's derived from is bis source:Cambridge Latin Course Unit 1
The English meaning of the Latin word 'coelis' is 'heaven'. According to the ancient, classical Latin, the pronunciation is chay-leese. According to liturgical Latin, the pronunciation is koy-lihss.
Leonard Tafel has written: 'Latin pronunciation and the Latin alphabet' -- subject(s): Accessible book, Alphabet, Latin language, Pronunciation
It doesn't have a Gaelic pronunciation: it is Latin.
In Latin: cantare est bis orare ("to sing is to pray twice")In Spanish:
Dominic in latin means powerful
Sell-wey.