always living, to live forever
Do you mean "Semper Fi"?"Semper Fi" is short for "Semper Fidelis", and that is Latin for "Always Faithful".Semper Fidelis is Latin for "Always Faithful". It is the motto of the United States Marine Corps.
I think you mean "Semper Fi", which is short for "Semper Fidelis", a Latin phrase meaning "Always faithful", which is the motto of the United States Marine Corps. Over the years the Marines have shortened it to Semper Fi, and "Semper Fi, Mac" is the universal Marine greeting.
I believe that you are asking what Semper Paratus means. It is latin for "Always Ready" and is the motto for the United States Coast Guard.
"Semper Paratus"(Always Ready)"
The latin word for always is semper and the Latin verb to love is amare so to love always would be semper amare but I don't know how you want that translated it would change based on what you mean by it
The English equivalent of the sentence 'Semper in dolore vivere est mortem poscere' is To live always in misery is to ask for death. In the word-by-word translation, the adverb 'semper' means 'always'. The preposition 'in' means 'in'. The noun 'dolore' means 'misery'. The verb 'vivere' means 'to live'. The verb 'est' means '[he/she/it] is'. The noun 'mortem' means 'death'. The verb 'poscere' means 'to ask for'.
Memento vivere.
You probably mean Semper vigilo, which is Latin for "I am always vigilant".
Semper = Always Vinco = Victorious
Do you mean "Semper Fi"?"Semper Fi" is short for "Semper Fidelis", and that is Latin for "Always Faithful".Semper Fidelis is Latin for "Always Faithful". It is the motto of the United States Marine Corps.
Semper is the Latin word for the English "always or forever" as in the Marine corps motto Semper fidelis or "always faithful".
Semper Fi is short for Semper Fidelis which means Always Faithful. Semper Paratus means Always Prepared.
vester semper is non grammatic Latin for "always yours"
"Semper tua" and "Semper tuus" both mean "Always yours". Difference is in sex of person who writes this state. "Semper tua" writes woman. "Semper tuus" writes man. But neither really means 'always yours' - that would be Semper tibi - for both genders.
It behoves one to live.
"Semper Fi" or Semper fidelis is Latin for "Always loyal" or "Always faithful".
I think you mean "Semper Fi", which is short for "Semper Fidelis", a Latin phrase meaning "Always faithful", which is the motto of the United States Marine Corps. Over the years the Marines have shortened it to Semper Fi, and "Semper Fi, Mac" is the universal Marine greeting.