Latin Phrases and Quotes
Starting with phrase number 3720

  1. suavi loquens - Soft spoken (Diplomatic term)
  2. Suavi mare magno - The pleasing great sea
  3. Suaviter in modo, fortiter in re - Soft in the forms, hard on the bottom
  4. Sub alis sto - We stand under our wings (Thank you: Kevin )
  5. Sub condicionea - Under the condition
  6. Sub cujus pede fons vivus emanat - Under whose base, flows a live source
  7. Sub hasta - Under the lance (That's where the share on the war spoils)
  8. Sub iudice - Under judgement (Legal term - Involved in a judicial process and waiting for a sentence)
  9. Sub lege libertas - Freedom under the law (Motto of Portugal)
  10. Sub limen - Below the threshold (University Term - the subliminal is what hides below the threshold of consciousness)
  11. Sub rosae amo te - I love you under the roses (I love you in silence)
  12. Sub secreto - Under secret
  13. Sub silento - Under silence ( Without notice being taken - Thank you: Leon )
  14. Sub umbra alarum tuarum protege me - Under the shadow of your wings, protect me (Vulgate - Psalm 16:7)
  15. Sub umbra floreo - Under the shade I flourish (Motto of Belize)
  16. Sublata causa, tollitur effectus - Removing the cause, removes the effect (Medical term)
  17. Substantia individuatur per seipsam - Primordial substance, individualized by being what it is (Definition of "individual", according to the general doctrine of St. Thomas Aquinas)
  18. Succede in arduum - Climb to the hard part (Livy)
  19. Sui Generis - Of its species
  20. Sui iuris - Own rights (Legal Term - Emancipated - Compare with Alieni iuris)
  21. Sum lupi rapantes - I am a raving wolf
  22. Summa Cum Laude - With Greatest Praise (Academic term - Used on degree certificates to indicate exceptional academic standing)
  23. Summa sedes non capit duos - The maximum power cannot be reached by two (Answer by the Roman Senate to the Carthaginian peace embassy, sent along the captive consul Regulus, after the first Punic War )
  24. Summa summarum - In short summary
  25. Summum ius, summa iniuria - Maximum law, maximum injury (Cicero - Excess of law - It is better to have less laws, but fulfill them, but be careful. A law that is applied with excess and rigor can be unfair)

Total: 4208
Previous Phrases Next


Look for latin phrases that contain:
Enter the word and press "Search!".
Try it with words like: Deus, Homo, Mihi, Nihil, Omnia, Rex, Tibi, Verita, etc.


©2007-2023 copyright www.deChile.net