Let my will stand for the reason.
'pro': Proceed: PRO ceed (pro sede') To go forward; advance
almost as English /pi-mae-pha-laes pro-mae-las
For or is.
"Where is the professor from?" is an English equivalent of the Spanish phrase ¿De dónde es el profesor? The question translates literally as "From where is the professor?" in English. The pronunciation will be "dey THON-dey eh-sel PRO-fey-SOR" in Uruguayan Spanish.
Pro- means "forward or before.
This is a slight misquotation of a comment in a letter by the Protestant theologian Martin Luther. Luther was responding to the charge that he had mistranslated a passage in Paul's letter to the Romans when producing his German translation of the Bible. The complete comment is:Sic volo, sic jubeo. Sit pro ratione voluntas. Lutherus ita vult, et ait se doctorem esse super omnes doctores in toto papatu.Which is to say,Thus I wish, thus I command. Let my will stand for a reason. Luther wishes it so, and says that he is a teacher above all the teachers in the whole of the Papacy.Sic volo, sic jubeo, sit pro ratione voluntas is, in turn, a slight misquotation of a line from the Satire VI of the Roman poet Juvenal (Decimus Junius Juvenalis). Juvenal wrote Hoc volo, "this I wish".
Pro usually means professional
English - pro- fess -or
"Pro Deo et Patria" translates to "For God and country" in English.
For God, for family, for country is the English equivalent of 'Pro Deo Pro Familia Pro Patria'. In the word by word translation, the preposition 'pro' means 'for'. The masculine gender noun 'deo' means 'god'. The feminine gender noun 'familia' means 'family'. The feminine gender noun 'patria' means 'country'.
Not English - try Italian.
For parents.
Learn English first
Same as in English.
It means, for the benefit of the world.
its deleted
"I stand for truth"