The meaning in English of the Latin phrase 'quis facere vis' is What power to make. In the word-by-word translation, the pronoun 'quis' means 'what'. The infinitive verb form 'facere' means 'to do, to make'. The noun 'vis' means 'power'.
It is a question header, meaning "Who...?"
facere
factor, from fact- 'done,' from the verb facere .
factory -- the original word is 'facio, facere, faci, factum'
From Latin 'sufficere'. Derived from ''sub' meaning up to, and root of 'facere' meaning to make
quis es means "who are you?"
"According to (concerning, regarding) job satisfaction" is the meaning of the English phrase "vis-Ã?-vis job satisfaction." The phrase precedes the two English word regarding fulfulling work with the French-loaned prepositional phrase vis-Ã?-vis(literally, "face to face").
It is most likely "vis à vis", meaning "regarding", or more rarely "in front of", "face to face" (from old French "vis", meaning "visage").
Facere in Latin means to make
Spanish from Latin 'facienda' meaning things to be done, from facere to make or to do.
Iter Facere was created in 2004.
vis-a-vis means in relation to/ regarding/face to face with. There should be an accent above the 'a', but I'm not sure where it is on the keyboard....and I'm going for my tea.