Quisque pro omnibus means "each for all".
virile,virtuoso remember these words mean "man" LOL
vir
Under the cross any man is a growing man is the English equivalent of 'Per crucem crescens vir quisquis vir'. In the word by word translation, the preposition 'per' means 'under'. The noun 'crucem' means 'cross'. The gerund 'crescens' means 'growing'. The noun 'vir' means 'man'. The relative 'quisquis' means 'any'.They are two of Lambda Chi Alpha's open mottos. They mean "The crescent in the cross" and "every man a man"
If you mean vir it means man.
Hero is Vir
Man; husband.
Technically, 'vir' by itself just means 'man' and such, though it could be understood as hero if it is in context. Idiomatically, Latin uses 'vir fortissimus' to mean hero, which literally means 'strongest man' and could supply context for any future uses of 'vir' by itself. The word 'heros' means hero, but it is limited in use to demigods. Otherwise, 'solus vir fortissimus' is most correct, but 'solus vir' can suffice if given the right context. It is worth mentioning that the order of those words is unimportant and can be shuffled with the same meaning.
English Latin man compleo, vir
The strongest man in the world.
The translation is, kalendarium
Viridis probably means something like manly in latin. It most likely derives from the latin word Vir, meaning man.