If you could can u translate this phrase into Latin . Gratias Ago
the phrase is
"You Idiot what is your problem"
And if u could translate these :
How to say in Latin :
-What:
-I cannot do that:
-I like it!!_
Gratias ago again!!!|||Do you really want to call someone an idiot? While you're thinking about that, the rest of that sentence would be "Quid est quaestio tua?" or "Quid rei est" (an idiomatic way of saying "What's the matter?") You could also say, "Quid est tibi?' which would translate loosely as "What's the matter with you?"
Now, if you really want to call someone an idiot, to a man you would say "stulte" (stupid) or "fatue" (silly, foolish); to a woman, it would be "stulta" or "fatua."
For the others, they're "Quid," "Non possum illud facere," and "Id amo" or "Id mihi placet." (Instead of "amo," you could say "diligo" or "carum habeo." These are all really ways of saying "I love it.")|||Idiot, what is your problem
could be
Stulte, quid est quaestio?
What? (meaning 'What did you just say?')
Quid?
I can't do that.
Non possum.
I like it.
fruor|||Why translate anything when you can't even write English?
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