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Latin Phrases and Quotes Starting with phrase number 2349
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- Morde meum globes - Bite my balls
- More maiorum - According to the custom of the ancestors (Legal term)
- Mores maiorum consuetudo - The custom of the ancestors (Legal term about the source of formal Roman law)
- Mores sunt tacitus consensus populi longa consuetudine inveteratus - The customs are tacit agreements made by the consensus of the people over a long interval - (Legal term Domitius Ulpianus)
- Mors Abalto - Death from above (WW II bomber squadron motto - Thank you: J.T.)
- Mors certa sed hora incerta - Death is certain, but the time is uncertain
- Mors certa, vita incerta - Death is certain, life uncertain.
- Mors est quies viatoris, finis est omnis laboris - Death is the rest of the traveler, the end of all the work (Quoted by Umberto Eco The Name of the Rose )
- Mors faciet ne sim - The death makes non-existence (Seneca)
- Mors Omnia Aequat - Mors equals us all (Phrase in the frontispiece of the Guadalupe cemetery in Leon, Nicaragua)
- Mors tantum pro certo habet victoriam ut primas nobis tribuit aetatem - The death is so sure of winning, it gives you full life of advantag
- Mors ultima linea rerum est - Death is the ultimate limit
- Mors ultima ratio - The death is the ultimate reason
- Morsus serpentum, non laedit sepentes, homo homini lupus - The bite of the snake, does not harm the snake, man to man is a wolf
- Mortis Causa - Cause of the Death (Legal term)
- Mortis nihil est. Sed vivere victus, sine gloria, uti morior quotidie est - Death is nothing. But to live up with no glory, is like dying every day
- Mortui non mordent - The dead do not bit
- Mortui viventes docent - The dead teach the living (Motto written on the front door of the autopsy room)
- Mortus est qui non resollat et non patalare potest - Dead is the one who cannot not gasp or kick
- Morum dissimilitudo dissociat amicitias - The difference in customs separate friends (Cicero)
- Mos maiorum ut lex valet - The customs of the ancestors have the force of law (Legal term)
- Motu proprio - By his own will (Legal term - No one told the accused what to do)
- Mulier Caesaris non fit suspecta etiam suspicione vacare debet - The wife of Caesar must not only be honest but also appear to be
- Mulier, decepta his verbis, decerpsit fructum et comedit - The woman was deceived by these words, plucked and ate fruit (Ecclesiastical term - Compendium of Sacred History - Charles Francois Lhomond)
- Mulier malum necessarium - The woman is a necessary evil (Terence - Phormio)
Total: 4205
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