"Quid quid latin dictum sit altum sonatur"
First of all, "Quid quid" is likely one word in this case. (Quidquid.)
Quid means "what" and Quidquid means "whatever" (or anything.)
The saying "Quidquid Latine dictum sit altum videtur" means
"Anything said in Latin, sounds profound."
(If you translate it more closely to the meaning of the actual Latin words, it translates like this: "Whatever, having been said Latinly, seems lofty." but Latin being translated as an adverb in English just sounds silly...)
The word "Sonatur" likely comes from Sonare, which means "to sound" I've never seen it used in this saying before, but "Sonatur" could be used instead of "Videtur" (to seem) and the saying wouldn't change in meaning.
Quidquid is one word, and Latin should be Latine (adverb ending) Otherwise, it doesn't make much sense. (Latina is the Latin word for Latin, so you would be misspelling it anyway...)
It actually means "Whatever is said in Latin sounds profound..." You will see it in the Dominus Empyreus page in Roblox.
The sentence 'Quidquid latine dictum sit altum viditur' contains a misspelling. For the word 'quidquid' is the subject, and therefore needs to be written 'quisquis'. The corrected phrase, 'Quisquis latine dictum sit altum viditur', means Whatever is said in Latin is seen [to be] noble.In the word-by-word translation, the relative pronoun 'quisquis' means 'whoever, whatever'. The adverb 'latine' means 'in Latin'. The adjective/past participle 'dictum' means 'said'. The verb 'sit' means '[he/she/it] is'. The adjective 'altum' means 'high'. The verb 'viditur' means '[he/she/it] is being seen'.A note from another reader: quidquid actually is correct. The original responder is right that quisquis is nominative, and that it means whoever, but quidquid is the NEUTER nominative, and it corresponds with the neuter altum. The sentence is fine. It does indeed mean "it seems high/noble, that thing having been said in Latin," or more understandably, "whatever is said in Latin seems noble." "sit" is subjunctive in an indirect question because of quidquid, if that helps at all.
altum
Aequore; altum; mare.
The abbreviation "dict." is derived from the Latin word "dictum," which means "something that is said." It is commonly used in English to refer to a dictionary or a definition.
Bene dictum.
alo, alui, altum (3rd conj.) or nutrio (4th conj.)
I'm pretty sure "Provehito In Altum" means, "Go forth into the deep". I don't read Latin or anything, but from other searches I've figured it out. "Provehito In Altum" is the band 30 Seconds To Mars' saying. It is also the slogan of a university.
The word "dicta" is a Latin plural. The singular is dictum.
U.D. stands for as directed. (latin ut dictum)
Ud=Ut dictum is a latin word, meaning "as directed"
the less said, the more great things
The Latin stem dict- is probably derived from the fourth principle part of the verb dico. Dictum is having been said. So the latin stem dict is probably to say.