Life goes on would be "Vita progreditur," I think.
Are you sure you want Latin and not French?
Yes? Oh well, "C'est la vie" (okay, that's literally 'such is life', but it's a good loose translation).
Vita perseverat
life goes on
"C'est la vie" = "That's life!". I'm guessing that "si la vie" is a mis-spelling of "c'est la vie!"? "C'est la vie" is a contraction of "Ce est la vie" ("ce est" contracts to "c'est"). "c'est" is pronounced similarly to "say" in English. Spanish "si" is pronounced similarly to "see" in English. ce = this/that est = is la = the (feminine definite article) vie = life So literally, "that is the life". But the "la" always accompanies the noun in French, and isn't relevant in the English translation. So think of "la vie" as translating in one unit to "life", as opposed to "the life". So the phrase means: "That's life!", similar to "That's the way life goes ...".
deus et ego Technically it is God and I... but you get the picture. Also traditionally in Latin ego would come first, but because no one goes before God I thought you would prefer this translation. :-)
i think it's c'est la vie! "c'est la vie" means "Such is life", "un clou chasse l'autre" is "Life goes on"
The Sanskrit word for pride is 'mana'. where it goes towards delusion, 'mada' is sometimes used.
If your asking about its translation it means "Everybody Goes Home" I am a firefighter and it is a commonly used phrase in our profession. If your asking about its translation it means "Everybody Goes Home" I am a firefighter and it is a commonly used phrase in our profession.
life goes on
Translating 'I am hungry' to Swedish goes like this: "Jag är hungrig".
Vita progreditur in Latin means "Life goes on" in English.
E alualu pea le olaga
The literal translation is love goes through the stomach. The equivalent English phrase is the way to a man's heart is through his stomach
Life goes on "we are the wastful youth" - MUSE MIKE
The New Mexico motto is Crescit eundo. This is a Latin phrase which translates into English as it grows as it goes.
The Latin phrase is ad infinitum, and it means that something goes on and on and on. In other words, the same as "etcetera", or "and so on".
The word domus originates from Latin. When translated, it means house or home. A popular Latin phrase is omnis cedo domus. It means everybody goes home.
"Ẹni tó bá fẹ́ ń ṣe àríyawoo oó ni ò gbọ́." This Yoruba phrase means "he who wants to live a long life must not hear everything."
Exit comes from the combination of the Latin prefix ex-which means "out" and the verb ire which means "to go". In Latin, exit means "he/she/it goes out".