This Latin phrase translates to "If one is sour, then we are all sour." It conveys the idea that the actions or behaviors of one individual can affect the group as a whole.
It means one/single.
One word that contains "unus" is "unusual."
It is pronounced as "par-uhm oo-noos."
The root word of "unify" is "uni," which comes from the Latin word "unus" meaning "one."
The root word for unique is "uni," which comes from the Latin word "unus" meaning "one" or "single."
It's a combination of a common Latin phrase and the meaningless output of an automatic online translator.Memento mori is literally "remember dying", but is often translated "remember that you will die".Nos totus intereo unus, on the other hand, is an attempted translation of "we all die one", but it really means "we an entire one I perish ".
Unus is "one".
Forever and a day.
it means one
It means one/single.
That's something that came out of one of those online translators. You put in English, they put out garbage. I can't even begin to gmuess what this was supposed to be. It translates (literal) to:We you are whole one until one our is dead.Further:I found the site in question (you'll get no link to it from me), and this is what it spits out when you give it "we are all one until one of us is dead". A much better translation for that sentence would be Unus sumus omnes quoad unus nostrum mortuus sit.
You can either say Unus Multorum or Unus de multis. they both mean the same but the second one gives a stronger connection to the "of many"
One word that contains "unus" is "unusual."
Unus the Untouchable was created in 1964.
This looks like an unsuccessful try at translating "One of God's children" into Latin. A more correct version would be Unus de liberis Dei.
Unus dies sine risu est dies perditus is the Latin equivalent of 'One day without a smile is one day lost'. In the word by word translation, the numerical adjective 'unus' means 'one'. The noun 'dies' means 'day'. The preposition 'sine' means 'without'. The noun 'risu' means 'smile'. The verb 'est' means '[it] is'. The adjective use of the past participle 'perditus' means 'lost'.
CONJECTVS VNVS, NEX VNVS or in a modern representation: CONJECTUS UNUS, NEX UNUS