Dictum Meum Pactum - My word is my contract (Motto of the Mexican stock exchange - 1894)
Dido sola stratis incubat - Dido, alone, lays in her bed (Virgil - Aeneid)
Die dulci fruere - Have a sweet day
Diem dicendo consumere - Consume the day talking (Tactic where a speaker takes the floor during the entire session to prevent a vote on a bill in the Roman Senate)
Dies a quo, dies ad quem - Initial day, final day (Legal term - In reference to to deadlines)
Dies ad quem - Last day (Legal Term - Day on which the period expires)
Dies aliter visum - The gods see it differently
Dies diem docet - Day teaches day (The education of a person is never complete)
Dies dominicus - The day of the Lord (Sunday, when we are supposed to go to church)
Dies illa, dies irae - (Terrible) that day, day of wrath (Requiem mass for the dead)
Dies irae - Day of Wrath (Ecclesiastical term - Words beginning, and name a sequence that reads the requiems)
Dies natali cristis - Day of Christ's birth
Dies natali solis invicti - Day of birth of the unconquered god
Difficile est longum subito deponere amorem - It is difficult suddenly to put aside a long-standing love (C. Valerius Catullus)
Difficile est satiram non scribere - It is difficult not to write satire (Juevenal)
Difficile est tenere quae acceperis nisi exerceas - It is difficult to retain what you may have learned unless you should practice it (Pliny the Elder)
Difficiles nugae - Difficult trifles (Work that has little return on investment)
Digitus dei est hic - God's finger is in this
Dignitatis humanae - Human dignity
Dii lanatos pedes habent - The gods have feet of wool (Petronius, Satyricon 44 - The gods are slow to act)
Diis aliter visum - The gods see it differently
Diis manibus - Sacred to the Manes (It is a dedication whose initials abound in pagan graves - abbreviated as D.M.)
Diis manibus Sacrum - Dedicated to the Names gods (It is a dedication whose initials abound in pagan graves - Abbreviated as D.M.S.)
Dimidium animae meae - Half of my soul (Philosophical term)
Dimidium facti qui coepit habet - Half is done when the beginning is done (Horace)