Never give up on you
caecus ; or render by phrase with posse and cernere: to be-, sub oculos non cadere, non comparere.The Latin word for invisible is invisibilis. You can also use the word invisibilia for the Latin form of invisible.
Non sequitur is Latin for "it does not follow". A statement is said to be a non sequitur if the conclusion does not follow from the premise.
This is a mock Latin phrase meaning: Don't let the bastards grind you down! I used Wikipedia to answer part of this question.
The English word "spurious" means not genuine, not real. If a thing is non-spurious, it is therefore genuine.Spurious derives from Latin spurius, meaning "bastard", or "something rejected as false", while the prefix non- is one of many ways that English expresses the negative (derived from Latin non, meaning not).
It is Latin, literally translated as "not kill" or don't kill. Necant is the plural present verb of to kill.
non-sequitur
The Latin phrase 'cine qua non' has the meaning that something is essential. It also can mean that an action, condition, or ingredient is needed. The plural form of this phrase is 'sine qua nons'.
The phrase "non sic" is not commonly used in English. In Latin, "non" means "not" and "sic" means "thus" or "in this way." Together, it indicates that something is not as described or not accurate.
"Non time mala" is Latin for "do not fear evil." It is a phrase often used to encourage courage and resilience in the face of challenges or adversity.
I believe the Latin phrase is: personna non grata
"Nulla molestia" is the Latin phrase that translates to "no worries" in English.
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.
Non = no, not
Alae non sunt mihi.
Non = no, not
non est = He or she or it is not
Non novit means "he, she or it does not know". In the phrase Ecclesia non novit sanguinem, it signifies "the Church knows no blood". Novit comes from the verb nosco - to know.