Question:

How do you say "in god i trust" in latin?

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also how do you say "i fear no man" in latin?

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  1. “Deo confidimus”(classical Latin)

    “In Deo confidimus”(ecclesiastical Latin)

    I don't know about the other one though.

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    It actually may be...

    "timeo non vir" or something. Sorry... school has been out for too long, my brain is dead =/

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    sorry! It is actually "timeo nullum virum". I am positive, I looked it up in my textbook because it was really bothering me that I forgot =P

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    caligirl--- what you said actually means "I (have) faith in God".


  2. The other answer means "In God _we_ trust".

    In God I trust: Deo confido (in God/I confide)

    I fear no man: A nemo territor (by/nobody/am I frightened)

    EDIT: J77, your answer is in Spanish. Spanish is not Latin, and, though Hispanic and Latino can be considered synonyms, they don't refer to the languages.

    EDIT: Geezimanerd314, "timeo non vir" is "I don't fear a man". "Non" is "not", not "none".

  3. Nia Odga Ia Rustta

    Ia Earfa Ona Anma

    haha, thats pig latin,

    but idk how to really say it

    is it- in Deus ego fides? (in God i trust)

    is it- ego vereor haud vir? (i fear no man)

  4. En dios confio

    no temo a ningun hombre

    and when you say latin its a little broad there is lots of languages considered latin

  5. Deo fido (or confido) - In God I trust. The 'in' is inherent in the verb.

    Nemine metuo (or timeo) - I fear no one.

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