Vee-vuht in both English and Italian and Bee-vaht in Spanish
Actually, it should be Vivat Iesu, as the Roman Latin alphabet did not have a "J".
aramic
Jesus Lives!
"Vivat" is a Latin word that translates to "long live" or "may he/she/it live" in English. It is often used as a celebratory exclamation or toast.
He lives to live.
I am the king
In this case, vivat means "may it live", cor means "heart", suum means "his" and in saecula means "for ever".So the translation is: "may his heart live for ever".
John Rawlinson has written: 'Vivat Rex'
Perm State University's motto is 'Vivat, Crescat, Floreat'.
Gottfried Kumpf has written: 'Vivat Pannonia' -- subject(s): Caricatures and cartoons, History
Amorem hic vivat.
Go to Amazon.com and search on the following: Vivat in Aeternum - Nicolas Roze