Any Latin Speakers?

October 12th, 2013

I need to pefectly translate “Love Conquers All” into Latin from English!
I’ve come up with
Vince = Conquer
Omnis = All
Amor = Love
Can anyone explain if this should be different in Sentence form?
Thanks.

Answer #1
Did you bother Googling it? Latin is a dead language–no one speaks it.
It’d be like asking if anyone speaks Aramaic.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Latin_phrases:_O#omnia_vincit_amor
Laziness FTMFL.
Answer #2
prozac4312 replied: Did you bother Googling it? Latin is a dead language--no one speaks it.
It'd be like asking if anyone speaks Aramaic.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Latin_phrases:_O#omnia_vincit_amor
Laziness FTMFL.

Latin is not a dead language, it is still used in commonplace everyday life, and especially law, it is also a well researched and common topic in high schools and colleges around the world because of its impression it has left on almost every language STILL in use.
True laziness is typing “FTMFL”.
Answer #3
You’re either not smart or don’t understand the concept of a dead language.
Phrases that are still used doesn’t mean people still speak the language.
I know a few Latin phrases, are you implying that I speak Latin?
There is nowhere in the world where this language is spoken exclusively–ergo dead language.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Extinct_language
By contrast to an extinct language which no longer has any speakers, a dead language may remain in use for scientific, legal, or ecclesiastical functions. Old Church Slavonic, Avestan, Coptic, Biblical Hebrew, Ge'ez, Latin, and Sanskrit are among the many dead languages used as sacred languages.
Game, set, match.

 

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