The latin phrase for "There is nothing you can't do" is "Nihil est non potes facere" Nihil- Nothing. Est- he/she/it (but in this case, there) is. Non Potes- You can't/ you are not able. Facere- To do.
Nothing if not to be
nec plus ultra is a Latin phrase meaning 'nothing beyond' / 'nothing better'
It means "I give back nothing" or "I give up nothing".
There is nothing Latin about that phrase: epic organ solo is English and "cue" appears to be a feeble attempt at the Spanish word "que", what, as in "what a . . . .!"
God is deus; nothing is nihil. Nothing must be in the genitive form because the phrase god of nothing implies the god belongs to nothing. DEUS NIHILORUM
This is not a correct Latin phrase. It appears to be a mixture of random Latin words.
Nihil sumus sine anima et scientia would be a translation of that phrase
The Latin phrase for bad faith is mala fides. The Spanish phrase for these words is mala fe and the Italian phrase is malafede.
Sorry, it took away my quotations when I posted it, but I'm looking for a phrase that would translate to: There is nothing worth fearing thanks!
The phrase 'epic world' translated to Latin as 'heroicis mundi'
"Ex officio" is the Latin phrase that means "by virtue of his office."