Ubi dubium, ibi libertas. ? "Where there is doubt, there is freedom."
Testing signature 2 - Overlook this crap
Collapse
This topic is closed.
X
X
-
-
Duobus litigantibus, tertius gaudet. ? "While two men argue, the third one rejoices."Comment
-
-
Vincere scis, Hannibal, victoria uti nescis. ? "You know how to win victory, Hannibal, you do not how to use it." According to Livy a cavalry colonel told Hannibal this after the victory at Cannae in 216 BC, meaning that Hannibal should have marched on Rome directlyComment
-
Errare humanum est. Perseverare diabolicum. ? "To err is human. To repeat error is of the Devil." (Seneca)Comment
-
Nil sine magno labore vita dedit mortalibus ? "life does not give mortals anything but hard labor" (Horace)Comment
-
Vox populi, vox dei. ? "The voice of the people is the voice of God."Comment
-
Proximus sum egomet mihi ? "I am closest to myself" (Terence)Comment
-
Ad astra ? "To the stars," title of the magazine published by the National Space Society.Comment
-
Nosce te ipsum! ? "Know thyself!" (Cicero, from the Greek gnothi seauton, on the Temple of Apollo at Delphi). See also: Temet nosceComment
-
Bona diagnosis, bona curatio. ? "Good diagnosis, good cure."Comment
-
Boni pastoris est tondere pecus, non deglubere. ? "A good shepherd shears his sheep, he doesn't flay them" (Tiberius to his regional commanders) i.e. don't tax the populace excessivelyComment
-
Saepe morborum gravium exitus incerti sunt. ? "The effects of serious illnesses are often unknown."Comment
-
Fiat justitia ruat coelum ? "Let justice be done, though heaven should fall."Comment
-
Amor vincit omnia ? "Love conquers all." (See Omnia vincit amor).Comment
-
Forsan et haec olim meminisse iuvabit ? "Perhaps even this will one day be pleasant to look back on" from Virgil's Aeneid, possibly a translation from Aesop.Comment
-
Ignoti nulla cupido ? "The unknown does not tempt."Comment
-
Fortes fortuna iuvat ? "Fortune favors the strong." (cf. Audaces fortuna iuvat.) (Terence)Comment
-
-
Vincere scis, Hannibal, victoria uti nescis. ? "You know how to win victory, Hannibal, you do not how to use it." According to Livy a cavalry colonel told Hannibal this after the victory at Cannae in 216 BC, meaning that Hannibal should have marched on Rome directlyComment
-
Interdum dormitat bonus Homerus ? "Sometimes even the good Homer slumbers" (i.e. even the best of us makes mistakes); originally quandoque bonus dormitat Homerus, Horace, Ars PoeticaComment
-
Festina lente ! ? "Make haste slowly" (i.e. proceed quickly but with caution, a motto of Augustus Caesar).Comment
-
Cura, ut valeas! ? "Take Care!"Comment
-
Per fas et nefas ? "With right and wrong" by any means necessaryComment
-
Iura novat curia. ? "The law is known to the court." Legal principle (e.g. in Germany) that says lawyers are not to argue the law because that is the office of the court.Comment
-
Iurare in verba magistri. ? "Swear by teacher's words."Comment
-
Qui habet aures audiendi audiat ? "Those who have ears to hear, hear!" (Vulgate, Matthew 11:15)Comment
-
Gutta cavat lapidem [non vi, sed saepe cadendo]. ? "A drop drills the rock [not with force but by falling repeatedly]." (Ovid, Epistulæ ex Ponto)Comment
-
-
Dominus Illuminatio Mea ? "The Lord is my light," motto of Oxford University.Comment
-
Deserta faciunt et pacem appelant - "They destroy everything and they call it peace." (Tacitus)Comment
-
Nulla poena sine lege ? "No punishment without a law."Comment
-
-
Maxima debetur puero reverentia ? "One owes the greatest possible care for the child" (Juvenal)Comment
-
Ubi bene, ibi patria ? "Where one feels good, there is one's country."Comment
-
Ex nihilo nihil fit ? "Nothing comes from nothing" (you need to work for something; also the Conservation Law in philosophy and modern science). (Lucretius)Comment
-
Risus abundat in ore stultorum ? "Laughs are plentiful in the mouth of the foolish."Comment
-
Ignorantia legis non excusat ? "Ignorance of the law is no excuse."Comment
-
Fide, sed qui, vide. ? "Trust but take care whom."Comment
-
Ubi tu Gaius, ibi ego Gaia. ? "Where you are, Gaius, there I, Gaia, will be." (This is said to have been a nuptial formula, but it is only known from Greek sources.)Comment
-
-
Ora et labora. ? "Pray and work." (Motto of Benedictine Order)Comment
-
-
Bona diagnosis, bona curatio. ? "Good diagnosis, good cure."Comment
-
Non omnia possumus omnes. ? "All of us cannot do everything." (Virgil)Comment
-
Ubi fumus, ibi ignis. ? "Where there's smoke, there's fire."Comment
-
Si vis pacem, para iustitiam. ? "If you want peace, prepare justice."Comment
-
A Deo rex, a rege lex ? "Of God the King, of the King the law". Attributed to James I of EnglandComment
-
Ubi mel ibi apes ? "Where there's honey, there are bees."Comment
-
Labor omnia vincit. ? "Work conquers all things." Motto of the State of OklahomaComment

Comment