Caesar, when he crossed the river Rubicon before entering Rome.
AA-LEA YAK-TA EST
Alea Jacta Est was created on 2004-01-01.
You spell Alea's name like this: O-R-A-N-G-E Yupp. That is how you spell it.
no word has est est est
You'll have to be more specific. "Est" is Latin for "is" (it is, he is, she is, 'etc.). EST could also stand for many things, such as Eastern Standard Time, or European Summer Time. More information can be found here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/EST bitches i said waht does e.s.t means First off you're so rude for calling them a b**** because off them thinking the standard time zone. You should of said what does e.s.t. stand for. But anywho back to the question it means established or 'since', for ex. Est 1990 {established or since 1990}.
AA-LEA YAK-TA EST
the die is cast
Julius Caesar, as he was crossing the Rubicon. He said "Alea iacta est:" the die is cast. With this, he began the civil war against the Senate, prior to becoming Caesar.
Famous quotes of Caesar. "Alea iacta est" means "the die is cast" and "veni vidi vici" means "I came, I saw, I conquered."
The Latin translation of "the die is cast" is "alea iacta est." This phrase is attributed to Julius Caesar and means that a decision has been made or an irreversible step has been taken.
Alea Jacta Est was created on 2004-01-01.
It was in the year 49 BC, after his campaign against the Gaul. Caesar made his decision on the river Rubicon in north Italy. Supposedly he stopped at the river bank for a moment to think, then said "Alea iacta est" or "The dice has been cast", and ordered his legion to cross the river.
the die has been cast. Julius Cesar said this after crossing the river into Italy in 49 B.C.
He said "iacta alea est", which means, "the die is cast."
The translation of the Latin phrase, "Iacta alea est" refers to a die, the singular of dice. Not "dye". The phrase is not, "The dye is cast." It is, "The die is cast." The original meaning of this phrase nothing to do with dice. it refers to the time when Julius Caesar took his army into Rome. Once he crossed the Rubicon with his forces there was no turning back as it was forbidden to enter Rome with ones Legion and he was now classed as an invader under Roman Law. Caesar said Jacta Alea Est literally meaning Let the dye be cast. The phrase refers adding dye or ink to water. Once mixed you cannot get it back out. "The die (singular of dice) has been cast" basically means one has committed to a decision. It literally means, "The die has (dice have) been rolled." The decision can't be reversed beyond this point. It is believed to have been said first by Julius Caesar when he committed cross the Rubicon river (a related saying, crossing the Rubicon also means committed to a decision that now can't be taken back). To protect the state from it's own military, it was forbidden to bring a legion of Roman soldiers across the Rubicon river into Italy. It was an act of war against the state. When he cross that line he is rumored to have said, "Iacta alea est (The die has been cast)." Note: The correct word is "die" (singular of dice) and not "dye" (substance used to stain or color something, like hair, clothing or shoes).
Leonard Alea died in 1812.
Erbessa alea was created in 1890.