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     Latin Phrases and Quotes Starting with phrase number 3321
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     - Quorum  -  Whose, who (are required for a meeting)
 - Quorum aliquem vestrum, unum esse volumus  -  Of whom we wish some one of you to be one
 - Quorum praesentia sufficit  -  Whose presence is enough
 - Quos licet Hebraei inter apocrypha separent, Ecclesia Christi tamen inter divinos libros et honorat et praedicat  -  Although the Hebrews consider these books among the apocryphal, the Church honors and preaches these books as divine (Isidore of Seville, referring to the deuterocanonical books)
 - Quot homines, tot sententiae  -  So  many men, so many opinions (Terence)
 - Quot hostis, servi tot  -  As many slaves, so many enemies (Phaistos - Verborum Significatione)
 - Quot Rami Tot Arbores  -  As many branches, so many trees (Motto of Allahabad University, India (Thank you: A. K. Mehrotra)
 - Quousque tandem abutere, Catilina, patientia nostra  -  Until when, Catiline, will you abuse our patience (Exordium of Cicero's first diatribe, where he complains to the Roman senate about Catiline conspiracy)
 - Rana Seriphia  -  A frog from Serpiphos (A person who does not say much. The frogs from the island of Seriphos are mute)
 - Rara avis  -  Rare bird (Unusual or exceptional)
 
	       - Rara avis in terris nigroque simillima cycno  -  A rare bird on earth and like a black swan (Juvenal - Satires VI )
 - Rara est ora et brevis mora  -  Rare is the limit and brief is the rest
 - Rara temporum felicitate, ubi sentire quae velis, et quae sentias dicere licet  - What uncommon fate of these times, where you can think what you want and say what you think (Publius Cornelius Tacitus, Histories, I, 1)
 - Rari nantes in gurgite vasto  -  Rare survivors in the immense sea (Philosophical term - Virgil -  Aeneid, I, 118)
 - Rastrum in Porta  -  The Rake at the Door (Pope Innocent XII (1691-1700)  motto, according to St. Malachy prophecies)
 - Rata parte  -  Calculated part (Pro rata, in proportion)
 - Ratem crede ventis, anima ne crede puellis namque es feminea tutior unda fide  -  Trust your ship to the winds, but not your soul to the maidens, since the waves are safer than the fidelity of a woman
 - Ratio agendi  -  Reason for acting (Legal term)
 - Ratio autem nihil aliud est quam in corpus humanum pars divini spiritus mersa  -  Reason is nothing other than a part of the divine spirit merged into the body of human beings (Seneca - The Epistles)
 - Ratio cognoscendi  -  Reason of Knowing (Legal Term and also philosophical term, ethics)
 - Ratio descidendi  -  Reason for acting (Legal term)
 - Ratio essendi  -  Reason of being (Legal and philosophical term, ethics)
 - Ratio et cor  -  Reason and heart
 - Ratio iuris  -  Justice rason of justice (Legal term)
 - Ratio nihil aliud est quam in corpus humanum pars divini spiritus mersa  -  
 
 Total: 4211       
  
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