| 
  
     Latin Phrases and Quotes Starting with phrase number 3005
   | 
 
 | 
  
     - Post festum, pestum  -  After the holiday, plague.
 - Post hoc, ergo propter hoc  -  After this, therefore as consequence of (Philosophical term used in logic - another version of  Cum hoc ergo propter hoc, indicates a fallacy in reasoning, the preceding events could be irrelevant to the supposed effect)
 - Post hoc ergo propter hoc  -  After this, therefore because of this (Legal and philosophical term - Fallacy that assumes that if it happened before, it must have caused it)
 - Post imbren nescitur herba; post postrivium, verba  -  After the rain the grass grows, after the wine, the words. 
 - Post Meridiem  -   Past Meridian (Afternoon after 12:00 - abbreviated as PM)
 - Post mortem  -  After the death (Autopsy)
 - Post mortem nihil est  -  After death there’s nothing
 - Post mortem nihil, ipsaque mors nihil  -  After the death nothing, death itself is nothing (Seneca)
 - Post Nubila Phoebus  -  After darkness theres light (Motto of the University of Zulia in Venezuela)
 - Post partum  -  After delivery
 
	       - Post pisces nux sit, post carnes caseus adsit  -  After fish, nuts; After the of meat, cheese (Medical advise to separate these foods)
 - Post Scriptum  -  Written after (Compare with Post Data - Used in correspondence when a comment is added later on the same day - abbreviated as PS)
 - Post tenebras lux  -  The light after darkness 
 - Post tenebras spero lucem  -  I hope there’s light after darkness (Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra - Motto of Don Quixote of the Mancha. In his shield next to a falcon and a lion)
 - Posteris lumen moriturus edat  -  After death give light to the future (Motto of Cauca University in Popayan, Colombia)
 - Postmeridianus  -  Belonging to past meridian (PM - In the afternoon, after 12:00)
 - Postmoerium  -  After the wall (hence "pomerium or pomoerium", which was the border of the holy city of Rome)
 - Postremus dicas, primus taceas  -  Postremus dicas, primus taceas - Last to speak, first in silence (Saint Isidore - first be silent, then speak, refers to discretion)
 - Potes currere sed te occulere non potes  -  You can run, but not hide
 - Potestas omnium rerum  -  Extraordinary powers (Legal term)
 - Potius mori quam foedari  -  Die before tarnishing the honor
 - Prae manibus  -  The scope of the hand (at hand)
 - Praeceptores suos adulescens veneratur et suspicit  -  The young man respected and admired his teachers
 - Praeclarius est id virtutem assequi  -  Much more is to achieve this excellent virtue (Motto of the family Bruguera)
 - Praecursor Siciliae  -  A Fore-Runner from Sicily  (Pope Innocent VIII (1484-1492)  motto, according to St. Malachy prophecies - Was from Sicily and named after John the Baptist, the precursor of Christ)
 
 Total: 4211       
  
     |