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Ancient Roman names; Dog Latin words and phrases; Latin biological phrases; Latin legal terms; Latin literary phrases; Latin logical phrases; Latin medical words and phrases; Latin mottos; Latin philosophical phrases; Latin political words and phrases; Latin religious words and phrases
General pledge of victoria aut mors ("victory or death"). Motto of the Higgenbotham and Higginbottom families of Cheshire, England; participants in the War of the Roses. Also the motto for the United States 1st Fighter Wing, Langley Air Force Base in Virginia. ave atque vale: hail and farewell: Catullus, Carmen 101, addressed to his deceased ...
The official name of the Roman Republic. "SPQR" was carried on battle standards by the Roman legions. In addition to being an ancient Roman motto, it remains the motto of the modern city of Rome. sensu lato: with the broad, or general, meaning: Less literally, "in the wide sense". sensu stricto cf. stricto sensu "with the tight meaning"
To seek the general in the specifics: That is, to understand the most general rules through the most detailed analysis. in statu nascendi: in the state of being born: Just as something is about to begin in theatro ludus: like a scene in a play: Surreal in toto: in all: Totally; entirely; completely. in triplo: in triple: In triplicate. in umbra ...
General pledge of victoria aut mors ("victory or death"). Motto of the Higgenbotham and Higginbottom families of Cheshire, England; participants in the War of the Roses. Also the motto for the United States 1st Fighter Wing, Langley Air Force Base in Virginia. ave atque vale: hail and farewell: Catullus, Carmen 101, addressed to his deceased ...
Speech written by Cato against general who sought triumphs for territories they had not conquered through war. Cato the Elder 190 BCE [14] [15] Defense speech by Domitius Afer: Domitius Afer provides a defense for Cloatilla Domitius Afer: Uncertain date [16] De Haruspicum Responsis: On the Responses of the Haruspices: Cicero discusses the ...
A Roman maxim adopted by Roman Dictator Julius Caesar, King Louis XI of France and the Italian political author Niccolò Machiavelli. dixi: I have spoken: A popular, eloquent expression, usually used in the end of a speech. The implied meaning is that the speaker has said all that had to be said and thus the argument is completed ...
Roman Catholic theological term for the content and truths of the Faith or "the deposit of the Faith", contrasted with fides qua creditur, which is the personal faith by which the Faith is believed; see previous phrase fides quaerens intellectum: faith seeking understanding: motto of St. Anselm; Proslogion: fidus Achates: faithful Achates