Home
News
Translation
Project
Forum
Help
Members
Log in
Register
. .
•Profile
machina
▪▪All translations
•Requested translations
•
Favorite translations
•List of projects
•Inbox
▪Free language exchange
▪▪English
•Türkçe
•Français
•Español
•Italiano
•Português brasileiro
•Deutsch
•Română
•عربي
•Русский
•Svenska
•Ελληνικά
•Български
•עברית
•Shqip
•Srpski
•Nederlands
•Dansk
•Português
•Polski
•汉语(简体)
•Lietuvių
•Norsk
•فارسی
•Suomi
•Hrvatski
•日本語
•Català
•Esperanto
•한국어
•Українська
•Føroyskt
•नेपाली
•Kiswahili
All translations
Search
All translations - machina
Search
Source language
Target language
Results 1 - 3 of about 3
1
53
Source language
“deus mortuus est, ego non sum†or deus est...
“deus mortuus est, ego non sum†"deus est mortuus ego sum non"
I found this txt in web but didn't found any translations for it but "deus mortuus est" is god is dead and "ego non sum" is supposedly I am not.
I would like to know which one is writen correctly and what does they exatly mean from word to word and also meaning of them. Thank you!
Completed translations
God is dead
Jumala on kuollut, minä en.
1