Latin Phrases and Quotes
Starting with phrase number 3218

  1. Qui quae vult dicit quae non vult audiet - The who says what he wants, will hear what he does not want (Terence)
  2. Qui recte consulate, consul cluat - He who counsels correctly, let him be titled counsil (Varro - De Lingua Latina)
  3. Qui scribit bis legit - The one who writes, reads twice
  4. Qui species consecratas abicit aut in sacrilegum finem abducit vel retinet, in excommunicationem latae sententiae Sedi Apostolicae reservatam incurrit; clericus praeterea alia poena, non exclusa dimissione e statu clericali, puniri potest - Whoever throws away the consecrated species or takes them away or keeps them for a sacrilegious purpose, incurs a latae sententiae excommunication reserved for the Apostolic Seat; Furthermore, a cleric can be punished with another penalty, not excluding dismissal from the clerical status (Code of Canon Law 1367)
  5. Qui studet optatam cursu contingere metam multa tulit fecitque puer, sudavit et alsit Abstinuit Venere et Baccho - He who wants to achieve his desired career goal, as a child must endure and do a lot of things, sweat a lot, and experience harsh cold, and refrain from Venus (goddess of love) an Bacchus (god of wine) (Horace - Arts Poetica - Motto used by arts students)
  6. Qui sunt in gratia, quanto plus accedunt ad finem, plus crescere debent - Those who have grace, the closer they get to the end, the more they need to grow spiritually (St. Thomas Aquinas In Epistola ad Haebreum)
  7. Qui tacet consentire videtur - He who is silent seems to consent (The silence makes us accomplices)
  8. Qui tacet non asseverat, sed est vero qui non negat - The one who is silent does not assert, but certainly does not deny (Legal term)
  9. Qui tacet non utique fatetur - He one, who is silent, does not admit nor deny.
  10. Qui tam pro domino rege quam pro se ipso in haec parte sequitur - He who presents the action the king, it follows that he presented it for its own benefit
  11. Qui unum habet vitium, omnia habet - He who has one vice, has them all (Seneca, De Benefiticiis)
  12. Qui vir odiosus! - What a hateful man!
  13. Qui vivet videbit - Who lives, will see
  14. Qui vult dare parva non debet magna rogare - Whoever wants to give, should not ask for much
  15. Quia contrivit portas aereas et vectes ferreos confregit - Because (we) crushed the towering city gates and have arrived in armour to destroy ( This is the motto of the St Ferdinand army of Spain and it was adopted by the parish of St Ferdianad in Lucena City Philippines as its masthead in the altar of the church. It speaks of the conquistadores's painstaking effort of subduing the ancient armies of the prehistoric islands. - Thank you: Roger M. Villar )
  16. Quia ipse mecum non possum - Because I cannot (litigate) against myself (Legal term - Gaius, Roman jurist (II c) 4.78 Digest)
  17. Quia semper necessitas probandi incumbit illi qui agit - Because the need to prove that demand is always on the claimant (Legal term - Marcian, Emperor of Constantinople (390-457) 22,3,21 Digest)
  18. Quibus rebus Roman nuntiatis tantus repente terror invasit - Upon learning this news, an intense, sudden fear invaded Rome (Julius Caesar - De Bello Civili )
  19. Quicquid temptabat scribere versus erat - Anything I tried to write, comes out as a verse (Phrase that emphasizes the "naturalness" of Ovid)
  20. Quicumque amisit dignitatem pristinam ignovis etiam iocus est in casu gravi - He who falls from the old grandeur, becomes a toy in his disgrace, the most despicable being (Phaedrus)
  21. Quid - What, why, how many, for what (the thing, the essence, the reason, the cause)
  22. Quid autem vocatis me Domine Domine et non facitis quae dico - Why call me, Lord, Lord, and not do what I say? (Said by Jesus Christ - Vulgate - Luke 6, 46)
  23. Quid dicam de thesauro rerum omnium memoria? - What shall I say of memory, repository of all knowledge? (Cicero - De senectute)
  24. Quid divinum - Something divine (Designates the very inspiration of genius)
  25. Quid ergo est tempus? Si nemo ex me quaerat, scio; Si quaerente explicare velim, nescio - What is time? If no one asks me, I know. But if I want to explain to someone who asks, then I do not know. (St. Augustine)

Total: 4199
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