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glenis | 17:28 Mon 03rd Jan 2011 | Arts & Literature
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what is latin for " I resolve " as in new years resolutions i resolve to do better
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ego diluo - according to an on-line translation site.
if you google 'english to latin translation' you'll find lots of sites.
17:50 Mon 03rd Jan 2011
ego diluo - according to an on-line translation site.
if you google 'english to latin translation' you'll find lots of sites.
Question Author
thank you
welcome :)
Online translation sites are frequently worse than useless.
Diluo is more likely to mean DISsolve rather than REsolve and the letter 'o' at the end of the word already indicates that it refers to the subject 'I', so you don't really need 'ego', which also means 'I'.

"Melior fieri statuo" means I resolve to do better, for example. A word by word translation would be "Better to do I resolve." Remember Latin grammar and word-order is not the same as English.

My advice to you - based on past experience of questions involving Latin on AnswerBank - is to check with an 'expert' WHATEVER answer(s) you get here...including mine, especially if this is to be inscribed or tattooed somewhere! For example, if your local secondary school has a Classics Department or even just a solitary Latin teacher, try to get a response from him/her. An alternative is to approach a local Catholic priest.
Would it not be melius, rather than melior (adv)
You're right, Mike. Melius is more accurate.
Actually, now I'm not so sure. I would use melius with facere, but fieri (used as the passive of facere in the sense of to become) probably requires an adjective.
You mean I was RIGHT!!??
Whatever.
very sound advice i think. personally i never take any advice/information found anywhere on the internet as gospel. i treat it as i would if i were chatting to someone at work or in the pub - interesting, but only someones opinion.

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