|
Latin Phrases and Quotes Starting with phrase number 2735
|
|
- Obligatio est iuris vinculum, quo necessitate adstringimur alicuius solvendae rei secundum nostrae civitatis iuria - Obligation is a legal bond that compels us as of necessity to render something under the laws of our city (Legal term - Justinian -Definition of obligation by Roman law. Concept of civil obligations)
- Oboedientia tutior - Obedience Is the Safer Path (Motto taught to priests in seminaries)
- Obscurum per obscurium - Dark from darker
- Observes ne in terram nimium aridam aut variam, sed temperatam, semen demittas - Pay attention not to cast your seed into a land too arid or too variant, but tempered (Varro - De Re Rustica, I, 42)
- Obsides imperare hostibus - Require hostages to the enemy
- Obviam primus - The first to Engage (Motto of the squadron that supports the deployment of the Spanish Air Force)
- Ocassus Servitutis - Decline of servitude (Motto in the shield of the state of Carabobo, Venezuela)
- Occasio furem facit - The opportunity makes the thie
- Occasio legis - Conditions that generated the law (Legal term)
- Occidente sole - At sunset (Cicero)
- Oculis et unguibus aeque victrix - By eyes and claws, equally victorious (Phrase rebel flag of Mexico)
- Oculos habent et non videbunt - They have eyes and will not see
- Oculum pro oculo, et dentem pro dente - An eye for eye, tooth for tooth (Vulgate, Exodus 41.24)
- Oculus domini pascit equum - Under the owner's eye, the horse eats
- Oderint dum metuant - Let them hate so long as they fear (Lucius Accius)
- Oderit dum me tuant - Order me, while you fear me
- Odi et amo - I love and hate
- Odi profanum vulgus et arceo - I hate crowds and keep them away (Horace, Carmina, III, 1)
- Offerte vobis pacem - Offer the sign of the peace
- Oh lente lente currite noctis equi - Oh, slowly slowly run horses of the night (Catulus)
- Oh redemptor sume carmen, temet concinentium - Oh redeemer receive the songs from the ones that grieve you (Song of the Chrism Mass on Holy Thursday)
- Omisso medio - What is in the middle is to be omitted (Legal term)
- Omne ignotum pro magnifico est - Everything unknown is superb (The neighbor's grass is always greener - Cornelius)
- Omne quod movetur ab alio movetur - Everything that moves is moved by something else (Philosophical term - Principle of the theory of motion and causation, of St. Thomas Aquinas)
- Omne tulit punctum, qui miscuit utile dulci - He, who has blended the useful with the sweet, has gained every point (Horace - Poetic Art - Verse 343)
Total: 4204
|