Vincere means to conquer.
EX:
Vinco - I conquer.
Vici - I conquered.
Victo - having been conquered.
Carpe diem in latin means "seize the day".
arise, go forth and conquer
vinco, vincere, vici, víctum This means "to conquer." To say, "I win" or "I conquer" you would say, "Vinco." Vinces - You win Vincet - He wins and so on.
The Latin word which means unify is Coniungere.
Vincent means conquerer
I vincere
They conquer.
Vincere - to conquer.
Carpe diem in latin means "seize the day".
To tame, subdue, conquer.
'Hoc Vince' is the Latin for 'By this conquer!'
Divide et impera
arise, go forth and conquer
Fuisse is the perfect verb form of the Latin word sum: to be. Therefore fuisse means had been
Amor et veritas vincunt omnia.
If you mean the question literally, then no, the word does not occur in the Latin language. If you mean "is it of Latin origin?", then yes. It is ultimately from the Latin verb vincere, "to conquer", via its Old French descendant venquis, "conquered".
vinco, vincere, vici, víctum This means "to conquer." To say, "I win" or "I conquer" you would say, "Vinco." Vinces - You win Vincet - He wins and so on.