"In suus muneris" is a Latin phrase that translates to "in his own duty" or "in their own office." It refers to the idea of someone acting within the scope of their responsibilities or roles. The phrase emphasizes the importance of fulfilling one's obligations or duties in a given context.
Quod Apostolici Muneris was created in 1878.
"Let him not belong to another who can belong to himself."
Depending on the context, munus muneris servitum officium famulatus
The phrase is in Latin...It means:I will check some it's then he will knowHope this helps!
. Bruce Springsteen published his poem "Suus" in an experimental literary magazine Coe Review number 9 in 1978.
"Kansallisuus" (kan - sal - li - suus)
love : diligo, dilectio, amor her love: suus diligo
Milton Hershey invented twizzlers!
suus, sua, suum
This is the output of an automatic translation site that was fed the text "of service to all" and made an awful hash of it. The Latin words mean, more or less, "of a function as entire", but the English word "of" has somehow also been included in the output.A better translation would be usui omnibus.
Nothing. The words are Latin, but they don't go together grammatically to express a coherent thought that could be translated.
A vir est tantum ut validus ut suus vox. I plugged it into an internet translator and this is what I got. Is this correct?