Sum is pronounced as "soom". Quod is pronounced as "kwod", with a short 'o' (note to Americans: not the common American short 'o' that verges on 'ah'; more like the 'au' in "taught").
Eris Quod Sum was created on 2008-10-27.
The classical Latin pronunciation is Eh'-ris (short i) kwod (short o as in "hot") sum (short u-sound as in "foot")
The Latin word quod has the basic meaning "that" and can be used in a number of different ways.In the phrase eris quod sum (see link below), it has the meaning "that which" or "what" so that the whole phrase means "You will be what I am".Quod can also be a conjunction meaning "in that" or "because", so that the phrase quod sum, if taken by itself, can mean "because I am".
Eris quod sum is Latin for "You will be what I am". This is part of a longer quotation often attributed to the Roman poet Horace (Quintus Horatius Flaccus, 65 BC - 8 BC), but found nowhere among his surviving works: Eram quod es, Eris quod sum ("I was what you are; you will be what I am").A similar phrase, Sum quod Eris; quod es, ipse fui ("I am what you will be; what you are, I myself have been") is quoted by the 11th-century writer Petrus Alfonsus in his Ecclesiastical Discipline, who says it is from a verse on a marble plaque seen by "a certain philosopher" while walking through an ancient cemetery.
"Quad" doesn't exist in Latin.If the quotation is sum quod sum, that's "I am what I am."
"Sum quod times," I am (that) which you fear. Add 'ego' and 'tu' if added emphasis is needed.
Heroes - 2006 II Chapter Seven 'Eris Quod Sum' 3-7 is rated/received certificates of: Netherlands:12 Netherlands:16 (DVD rating) USA:TV-14
Megadeth "So far So Good So What"--the song "Mary Jane"???--1990"Beauty's Lot: As I Now Am, So You Shall Be," 1778Beautys Lot Adorn'd with Tates, I well could Boast, Of Tons and Macaronys Toast;I once was Fair, Young, Frisky, Gay, Could Please with songs and Dance the HayDear Belle's reflect Ye Morals see, As I now am, so You shall be.Pub as the act directs Feb. 1, 1778...Probably Horace, "Eram quod es, Eris quod sum" or was it.."quod tu es, ego fui, quod ego sum, tu Eris" or some such thing, I never can remember.In short,,,probably best to go with MegadethHorace, "Eram quod es; Eris quod sum"URL: http://able2know.org/topic/79058-1
HAND-SUM
The English equivalent of the Latin sentence 'Quod me nutrit me destruit' is the following: Whatever nourishes me destroys me. The word-by-word translation is as follows: 'quod' means 'what'; 'me' means 'me'; 'nutrit' means '[it] nourishes, nurtures'; 'destruit' means '[it] destroys'. And the pronunciation is the following: Kwohd may NOO-triht may DEH-stroo-iht.
'They condemn what they don't understand.' Pronounce as "con-demn-nant kwod non in-tell-e-gunt'
Fort Sum-ter.