Vis animae means "strength of spirit/will."
If you mean the English translation, then 'draco' is Latin for dragon.
English,French, Italian, and Latin
At the end of 'A Study in Scarlet,' Sherlock Holmes quotes this Latin phrase from Horace: "Populus me sibilat, at mihi plaudo; Ipse domi simul ac nummos contemplar in arca" (Book 1, Satire 1). It means, "The public hisses at me, but I applaud myself in my own house, and simultaneously contemplate the money in my chest."
Victoria is the Spanish and Latin word for victory. :-)
Italian, French, Latin and Classical Greek. The Venetian ambassador wrote in 1603 that she "possessed nine languages so thoroughly that each appeared to be her native tongue ... five of these were the languages of peoples governed by her: English, Welsh, Cornish, Scottish ... and Irish."
You will not relinquish; you will not abandon.
This phrase means "Wisdom with honor"
The English translation of the Latin phrase "gloria patri" would be "glory to the Father" or "glory (be given) to the Father."
Tempus fortuna est.
Know yourself
Pearls before swine
Blind are led by the blind
Id est.
One Latin equivalent of the English phrase 'you are invited' is the following: invitaris. Another equivalent is as follows: invitamini. For the first invitation is issued to one person, and the second to more than one.
we don't learn for school but for life
The phrase 'fortitud int deo' translates from Latin as 'between the strength of God'
The classic phrase Esse quam videri could be translated this way. It literally means "to be as you seem".