Hodie die bonum cadere est.
"Malae diem" I belive (Malae = Bad, Diem = Day)
Buenos dias = Good day
This common greeting "good morning" translates into a single word in Latin. The two-word English phrase becomes the single-word "salve".
Carpe punctum. or Carpe momentum temporis.
The Latin equivalent of the greeting 'good afternoon' is Bonus tempus postmeridianus. In the word-by-word translation, the adjective 'bonus' means 'good'. The noun 'tempus' means 'time'. The adjective 'postmeridianus' means 'after noon'.
"Today" in Latin is hodie (a contraction of hoc die, "on this day"). It's always an adverb. The corresponding noun is actually the noun phrase hodiernus dies ("the day of today").
It's going to be a good day today
The Latin word for 'day' is 'dies'. The Latin word for 'today' is 'hodie'.
today was a good day in french
"What day is today?"
stop dwelling in it. move on and live for the day.. today is a new day and you need to embrace it. live for today.. like they say in n.a. "just for today"...good luck.
Nappy Roots - Good Day
Que tenga un buen dia
Aujourd'hui est une bonne journée.
No, it is more correct to say, "What day is it today?"
Good Day by Nappy Roots
How about something like this: Hi, how was your day? #2 answ: Yeah, that one is good, or you could try some variations, like 'Have a good day' or Did you have a good day?