The correct spelling is "Hodie Christus natus est" which is Latin for "Today Christ is born".
It is an abbreviation for a Latin phrase meaning "id est", meaning "that is". (source: yahoo answers).
It means, "How is life?" in French.
Its an abbreviation carry over from Latin-id est meaning-you guessed it, that is.
no word has est est est
"Dis" is a prefix. "Honesty" is the root word. "ly" would be a suffix, as "Dishonestly".
It is in Latin. The meaning, if you are interested is, "Today, christ is born.
Hodie die bonum cadere est.
Natus is the Latin root for born as in Hodie Christus natus est, which means "Today Christ is born".
One day I may not be able to work. Today isn't that dayis the English equivalent of 'Uno die ego non polleo efficere. Hodie est non ille dies'. In the word by word translation, the number 'uno' means 'one'. The noun 'die' means 'day'. The personal pronoun 'ego' means 'I'. The adverb 'non' means 'not'. The verb 'polleo' means '[I] may be able to'. The verb 'efficere' means 'to work'. The adverb 'hodie' means 'today'. The verb 'est' means '[he/she/it] is'. The demonstrative 'ille' means 'that'. The noun 'dies' means 'day'.
I think that this sentence was copied down in an incomplete form. "Hodie" should actually be "hodierno die". In that case it means: it is good to fall (to die) on this day. It could be part of a speech such as: it is good, on this day, to die for a noble cause, for freedom, for our country, etc.
The Latin word est is equivalent to "is" in English language.
Salut; What/Who is it/this
Nobis Est Natus means "to us is born" Is that what you mean?
où est la chaise means 'where is the chair' in French.
i.e. = id est
he is mine
Yes, "aujourd'hui est" translates to "today is" in French.