This sentence is the product of a Latin "translation" website that translates English input word by word with no regard for how the words relate to each other; the result is a string of Latin words rather than a Latin sentence with the same meaning as the original.
In this case the input was "I will love you for the occasion" or some such thing. If you must know what the Latin output means, it's more or less "I, the custom, esteem you [plural] on account of villages."
I fish therefore i am translated into Latin is ego expiscárí itaque ego esse The one above looks like some garbage from an on-line translator. It means 'I to fish for and so I to be.' Piscor ergo sum = I fish therefore I am.
Ego IS a Latin word. It is the Latin for I.
to let go of the noodles
None. It is irregular. Nom = ego Genitive = Mei Dative = Mihi Accusative = Me Ablative = Me
"Ego pecuniam quaero." means 'I (ego and quaero) seek (quaero) money/wealth (pecuniam).'
"Ego" means "I" in Latin. Similarly, in English, a person's ego refers to their sense of self-inflated pride over their superiority over others.
Ego in Latin means I
Ego
Ego
It means "I am lazy", although according to the Oxford Latin Dictionary, the 'i' in ignavus is not long.
It translates to "I am the lord and master of my friend" in Latin.
In latin I am coming? is: 'Ego Venio?'