Although the literal translation would be something like bona fortuna, in fact, the Romans used to say "Res secundae" which sounds a bit like "second things" but actually means "favourable things."
'I would say:
vita bona tibi - "a good life to you"'
Our Latin teacher says "habete bonum weekend" which means "have a good weekend. So I would say "habete bonum vita" if you are speaking to more than one person (the "te" in "habete" indicates a plural imperative--you're telling them to do it) or "habe bonum vita" if you're speaking to one person. Hope that helps.
prosperitas, proventus, fructus, frux, eventus
My best wishes
"Buena suerte mi amigo/a"
Feliciter!
Siendum spieus est mejorus.
The word benevolent was derived from the latin word volens.
vivit.
It does not translate it is the same
Babelfish.
Best wishes
Shubhechcha
meilleurs voeux
Meilleurs voeux
The best English translation of Latin ultra is "beyond."
reddo is latin for translate.
Siendum spieus est mejorus.
The word benevolent was derived from the latin word volens.
thanks for all the birthday wishes
It is "meilleurs vœux pour votre retraite"
Go to google translate select translate form English to Latin and type what you want!
The word surprise in Latin is admiratio