Latin Phrases and Quotes
Starting with phrase number 2272

  1. Melius esse iudicans pharisaeorum displicere iudicio et episcoporum iussionibus deservire - It is better to oppose the judgment of the Pharisees and to obey the ordinances of bishops (St. Jerome)
  2. Melius est flerisse quam flere - It is better to have cried, than to cry
  3. Melius est habere quam habuisse - It is better to have, than to have had
  4. Melius est pede quam labi lingua - It is better to slip with the foot, than with the tongue
  5. Mellita domi adsum - Honey, I'm hom
  6. Memento audere semper - Remember to always dare (Motto created by the Italian poet Gabriele D'Annunzio)
  7. Memento homo, quia pulvis eris et in pulverem reverteris - Remember man, that you are dust and to dust you return (Ecclesiastical term - Used in the ceremony of the imposition of Ash Wednesday - Vulgate, Genesis 3.19)
  8. Memento mei - Remember Me (Ecclesiastical term - Words that a priest says to another when he goes to celebrate mass)
  9. Memento mori - Remember that you must die
  10. Memento vivere - Remember that you are alive (Philosophical term)
  11. Memoria minuitur nisi eam exerceas - The memory diminishes, if you don’t exercise it
  12. Mendacem oportet esse memorem - To lie, you must have good memory
  13. Mens agitat molem - The mind moves matter (Virgil)
  14. Mens agitat molens - The mind moves the moles
  15. Mens divinior - Poetic mind
  16. Mens et cor homo est - The man is mind and heart (Vicente Garcia L - the man is not just body and mind only, but both together)
  17. Mens legis - Will of the legislature (Legal term)
  18. Mens Rea - Guilty mind (Legal term which is used in common law, it comes from the Latin phrase, "actus non facit reum nisi mens sit rea", which means "the act will not make a person guilty, unless the mind is also guilty ".)
  19. Mens sana in corpore sano - Healthy mind, healthy body (Decimus Junius Juvenalis)
  20. Mente captus - Lack of intelligence
  21. Mente et malleo - With mind and hammer (Motto of Geolagical Society)
  22. Menti da lucem manibus artem - Light in the mind, art in the hands (Motto of the Faculty of Medicine of the Autonomous University of Chihuahua, Mexico)
  23. Meos tam suspicione quam crimine iudico carere oportere - My people should never be suspected of breaking the law (Sentence of Julius Caesar, after divorcing Pompeii in 62 BC)
  24. Mercurii dies - The day of Mercury (Wednesday)
  25. Meus Caeli - My heaven

Total: 4199
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