"He/she is with God now."
Th English equivalent of the Latin sentence 'Nunc est bibendum' is the following: Now is [the time for] drinking. The word-by-word translation is as follows: 'nunc' means 'now'; 'est' means '[It] is'; and 'bibendum' means 'the act of drinking'. The pronunciation is the following: noonk ehst bee-BEHN-doom.
Nunc quid est id is the Latin equivalent of 'Now what is it?'. In the word by word translation, the adverb 'nunc' means 'now'. The interrogative pronoun 'quid' means 'what'. The verb 'est' means '[he/she/it] is'. The pronoun 'id' means 'it'.
Quota hora est?
The Latin word for now is nunc
nunc est bibendum means "now it is time to drink". The phrase hold a meaning very similar to "carpe diem" (seize the day). Created by Homer (the writer, not the character) it means that you should not worry too much and just relax.
You have unfortunately quoted only part of the phrase, which is always an error.The quote is from Horace: "nunc est bibendum, nunc pede libero pulsanda tellus", which means "now [we] must drink and now tap the ground with a light foot" - meaning dance. Note that the word is pulsanda not pulsando, which makes no sense in this context.The whole quote is about living the good life, enjoying oneself and partying.
I notice you all now.
Nunc was created in 1953.
Well, I'm not absolutely positive but "qui" in latin means "what" and "nunc" means "now"... SO.... Qui nunc?
Rident means retire in Latin and Nunc means now
Nalge Nunc International was created in 1995.