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Latin Phrases and Quotes Starting with phrase number 2360
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- 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)
- Mulier mulieri magis convenit - Women living with women coexist better
- Mulier taceat in Ecclesia - Let the woman be silent in church
- Multa hospicia, nullas amicitias - Many acquaintances, no friends
- Multa pausia - Much in a nutshell
- Multa renascentur, quae iam cecidere, cadentque quae nunc sunt in honore vocabula, si volet usus, quem penes arbitrium est et ius et norma loquendi
- Many words will be reborn that have already been lost and will fall into oblivion voices that today have prestige, if that is what usage wants, who is the true arbiter and ruler of the language (Horace - Ars poetica These famous lines condense one of the most thoughtful considerations about language that a poet has ever made) - Multi autem sunt vocati pauci vero electi - Many are called but few chosen (Vulgate, Matthew 22,14 - Said by Jesus Christ)
- Multis e gentibus vires - From many people, strength (Motto of Saskatchewan, Canada)
- Multo autem ad rem magis pertinet quallis tibi vide aris quam allis - It is much more important what you think of yourself, than what others think of you (Seneca)
- Multum in parvo - Much in little
- Multum, non multa - Much, not many (Quality before quantity)
- Mundus appellatur caelum, terra, mare et aer - The world is called to heaven, earth, sea and air (Septimivs phrase Tertvlianvs Florens)
- Mundus est omnia natura rerum conceptio summa, caelumque sideribus conformatum - The world is in an all-encompassing concept, all things in nature and the sky formed by the stars (Marcvs Vitrubivs Pollio in the book "De Architectura")
Total: 4204
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