Latin word and phrases

in: Character, Featured, Knowledge of Men

May 10, 2019 • Last updated: September 3, 2021

Ancient greek leaders giving speech in a meeting.

What do great men like Benjamin Franklin, Thomas Jefferson, and Theodore Roosevelt all have in common?

They all were proficient in Latin.

From the Middle Ages until about the middle of the 20th century, Latin was a central part of a man’s schooling in the West. Along with logic and rhetoric, grammar (as Latin was then known) was included as part of the Trivium – the foundation of a medieval liberal arts education. From Latin, all scholarship flowed and it was truly the gateway to the life of the mind, as the bulk of scientific, religious, legal, and philosophical literature was written in the language until about the 16th century. To immerse oneself in classical and humanistic studies, Latin was a must.

Grammar schools in Europe and especially England during this time were Latin schools, and the first secondary school established in America by the Puritans was a Latin school as well. But beginning in the 14th century, writers started to use the vernacular in their works, which slowly chipped away at Latin’s central importance in education. This trend for English-language learning accelerated in the 19th century; schools shifted from turning out future clergymen to graduating businessmen who would take their place in an industrializing economy. An emphasis on the liberal arts slowly gave way to what was considered a more practical education in reading, writing, and arithmetic.

While Latin had been dying a slow death for hundreds of years, it still had a strong presence in schools until the middle of the 20th century. Beginning in the 1960s, college students demanded that the curriculum be more open, inclusive, and less Euro-centric. Among their suggested changes was eliminating Latin as a required course for all students. To quell student protests, universities began to slowly phase out the Latin requirement, and because colleges stopped requiring Latin, many high schools in America stopped offering Latin classes, too.  Around the same time, the Catholic Church revised its liturgy and permitted priests to lead Mass in vernacular languages instead of Latin, thus eliminating one of the public’s last ties to the ancient language.

While it’s no longer a requirement for a man to know Latin to get ahead in life, it’s still a great subject to study. I had to take classes in Latin as part of my “Letters” major at the University of Oklahoma, and I really enjoyed it. Even if you’re well out of school yourself, there are a myriad of reasons why you should still consider obtaining at least a rudimentary knowledge of the language:

Knowing Latin can improve your English vocabulary. While English is a Germanic language, Latin has strongly influenced it. Most of our prefixes and some of the roots of common English words derive from Latin. By some estimates, 30% of English words derive from the ancient language. By knowing the meaning of these Latin words, if you chance to come across a word you’ve never seen before, you can make an educated guess at what it means. In fact, studies have found that high school students who studied Latin scored a mean of 647 on the SAT verbal exam, compared with the national average of 505.

Knowing Latin can improve your foreign language vocabulary. Much of the commonly spoken Romanic languages like Spanish, French, and Italian derived from Vulgar Latin. You’ll be surprised by the number of Romanic words that are pretty much the same as their Latin counterparts.

Many legal terms are in Latin. Nolo contendere. Mens rea. Caveat emptor. Do you know what those mean? They’re actually common legal terms. While strides have been made to translate legal writing into plain English, you’ll still see old Latin phrases thrown into legal contracts every now and then. To be an educated citizen and consumer, you need to know what these terms mean. If you plan on going to law school, I highly recommend boning up on Latin. You’ll run into it all the time, particularly when reading older case law.

Knowing Latin can give you more insight to history and literature. Latin was the lingua franca of the West for over a thousand years. Consequently, much of our history, science, and great literature was first recorded in Latin. Reading these classics in the original language can give you insights you otherwise may have missed by consuming it in English.

Moreover, modern writers (and by modern I mean beginning in the 17th century) often pepper their work with Latin words and phrases without offering a translation because they (reasonably) expect the reader to be familiar with it. This is true of great books from even just a few decades ago (seems much less common these days – which isn’t a hopeful commentary on the direction of the public’s literacy I would think). Not having a rudimentary knowledge of Latin will cause you to miss out on fully understanding what the writer meant to convey.

Below we’ve put together a list of Latin words and phrases to help pique your interest in learning this classical language. This list isn’t exhaustive by any stretch of the imagination. We’ve included some of the most common Latin words and phrases that you still see today, which are helpful to know in boosting your all-around cultural literacy. We’ve also included some particularly virile sayings, aphorisms, and mottos that can inspire greatness or remind us of important truths. Perhaps you’ll find a Latin phrase that you can adopt as your personal motto. Semper Virilis!

Latin Words and Phrases Every Man Should Know

  1. a posteriori — from the latter; knowledge or justification is dependent on experience or empirical evidence
  2. a priori — from what comes before; knowledge or justification is independent of experience
  3. acta non verba — deeds, not words
  4. ad hoc — to this — improvised or made up
  5. ad hominem — to the man; below-the-belt personal attack rather than a reasoned argument
  6. ad honorem — for honor
  7. ad infinitum — to infinity
  8. ad nauseam — used to describe an argument that has been taking place to the point of nausea
  9. ad victoriam — to victory; more commonly translated into “for victory,” this was a battle cry of the Romans
  10. alea iacta est — the die has been cast
  11. alias — at another time; an assumed name or pseudonym
  12. alibi — elsewhere
  13. alma mater — nourishing mother; used to denote one’s college/university
  14. amor patriae — love of one’s country
  15. amor vincit omnia — love conquers all
  16. annuit cœptis –He (God) nods at things being begun; or “he approves our undertakings,” motto on the reverse of the Great Seal of the United States and on the back of the United States one-dollar bill
  17. ante bellum — before the war; commonly used in the Southern United States as antebellum to refer to the period preceding the American Civil War
  18. ante meridiem — before noon; A.M., used in timekeeping
  19. aqua vitae — water of life; used to refer to various native distilled beverages, such as whisky (uisge beatha) in Scotland and Ireland, gin in Holland, and brandy (eau de vie) in France
  20. arte et marte — by skill and valour
  21. astra inclinant, sed non obligant — the stars incline us, they do not bind us; refers to the strength of free will over astrological determinism
  22. audemus jura nostra defendere — we dare to defend our rights; state motto of Alabama
  23. audere est facere — to dare is to do
  24. audio — I hear
  25. aurea mediocritas — golden mean; refers to the ethical goal of reaching a virtuous middle ground between two sinful extremes
  26. auribus teneo lupum — I hold a wolf by the ears; a common ancient proverb; indicates that one is in a dangerous situation where both holding on and letting go could be deadly; a modern version is, “to have a tiger by the tail”
  27. aut cum scuto aut in scuto — either with shield or on shield; do or die, “no retreat”; said by Spartan mothers to their sons as they departed for battle
  28. aut neca aut necare — either kill or be killed
  29. aut viam inveniam aut faciam — I will either find a way or make one; said by Hannibal, the great ancient military commander
  30. barba non facit philosophum — a beard doesn’t make one a philosopher
  31. bellum omnium contra omnes — war of all against all
  32. bis dat qui cito dat — he gives twice, who gives promptly; a gift given without hesitation is as good as two gifts
  33. bona fide — good faith
  34. bono malum superate — overcome evil with good
  35. carpe diem — seize the day
  36. caveat emptor — let the buyer beware; the purchaser is responsible for checking whether the goods suit his need
  37. circa — around, or approximately
  38. citius altius forties — faster, higher, stronger; modern Olympics motto
  39. cogito ergo sum — “I think therefore I am”; famous quote by Rene Descartes
  40. contemptus mundi/saeculi — scorn for the world/times; despising the secular world, the monk or philosopher’s rejection of a mundane life and worldly values
  41. corpus christi — body of Christ
  42. corruptissima re publica plurimae leges — when the republic is at its most corrupt the laws are most numerous; said by Tacitus
  43. creatio ex nihilo — creation out of nothing; a concept about creation, often used in a theological or philosophical context
  44. cura te ipsum — take care of your own self; an exhortation to physicians, or experts in general, to deal with their own problems before addressing those of others
  45. curriculum vitae — the course of one’s life; in business, a lengthened resume
  46. de facto — from the fact; distinguishing what’s supposed to be from what is reality
  47. deo volente — God willing
  48. deus ex machina — God out of a machine; a term meaning a conflict is resolved in improbable or implausible ways
  49. dictum factum — what is said is done
  50. disce quasi semper victurus vive quasi cras moriturus — learn as if you’re always going to live; live as if tomorrow you’re going to die
  51. discendo discimus — while teaching we learn
  52. docendo disco, scribendo cogito — I learn by teaching, think by writing
  53. ductus exemplo — leadership by example
  54. ducunt volentem fata, nolentem trahunt — the fates lead the willing and drag the unwilling; attributed to Lucius Annaeus Seneca
  55. dulce bellum inexpertis — war is sweet to the inexperienced
  56. dulce et decorum est pro patria mori — it is sweet and fitting to die for your country
  57. dulcius ex asperis — sweeter after difficulties
  58. e pluribus unum — out of many, one; on the U.S. seal, and was once the country’s de facto motto
  59. emeritus — veteran; retired from office
  60. ergo — therefore
  61. et alii — and others; abbreviated et al.
  62. et cetera — and the others
  63. et tu, Brute? — last words of Caesar after being murdered by friend Brutus in Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar, used today to convey utter betrayal
  64. ex animo — from the heart; thus, “sincerely”
  65. ex libris — from the library of; to mark books from a library
  66. ex nihilo — out of nothing
  67. ex post facto — from a thing done afterward; said of a law with retroactive effect
  68. faber est suae quisque fortunae — every man is the artisan of his own fortune; quote by Appius Claudius Caecus
  69. fac fortia et patere — do brave deeds and endure
  70. fac simile — make alike; origin of the word “fax”
  71. flectere si nequeo superos, acheronta movebo — if I cannot move heaven I will raise hell; from Virgil’s Aeneid
  72. fortes fortuna adiuvat — fortune favors the bold
  73. fortis in arduis — strong in difficulties
  74. gloria in excelsis Deo — glory to God in the highest
  75. habeas corpus — you should have the body; a legal term from the 14th century or earlier; commonly used as the general term for a prisoner’s right to challenge the legality of their detention
  76. habemus papam — we have a pope; used after a Catholic Church papal election to announce publicly a successful ballot to elect a new pope
  77. historia vitae magistra — history, the teacher of life; from Cicero; also “history is the mistress of life”
  78. hoc est bellum — this is war
  79. homo unius libri (timeo) — (I fear) a man of one book; attributed to Thomas Aquinas
  80. honor virtutis praemium — esteem is the reward of virtue
  81. hostis humani generis — enemy of the human race; Cicero defined pirates in Roman law as being enemies of humanity in general
  82. humilitas occidit superbiam — humility conquers pride
  83. igne natura renovatur integra — through fire, nature is reborn whole
  84. ignis aurum probat — fire tests gold; a phrase referring to the refining of character through difficult circumstances
  85. in absentia — in the absence
  86. in aqua sanitas — in water there is health
  87. in flagrante delicto — in flaming crime; caught red-handed, or in the act
  88. in memoriam — into the memory; more commonly “in memory of”
  89. in omnia paratus — ready for anything
  90. in situ — in position; something that exists in an original or natural state
  91. in toto — in all or entirely
  92. in umbra, igitur, pugnabimus — then we will fight in the shade; made famous by Spartans in the battle of Thermopylae and by the movie 300
  93. in utero — in the womb
  94. in vitro — in glass; biological process that occurs in the lab
  95. incepto ne desistam — may I not shrink from my purpose
  96. intelligenti pauca — few words suffice for he who understands
  97. invicta — unconquered
  98. invictus maneo — I remain unvanquished
  99. ipso facto — by the fact itself; something is true by its very nature
  100. labor omnia vincit — hard work conquers all
  101. laborare pugnare parati sumus — to work, (or) to fight; we are ready
  102. labore et honore — by labor and honor
  103. leges sine moribus vanae — laws without morals [are] vain
  104. lex parsimoniae — law of succinctness; also known as Occam’s Razor; the simplest explanation is usually the correct one
  105. lex talionis — the law of retaliation
  106. magna cum laude — with great praise
  107. magna est vis consuetudinis — great is the power of habit
  108. magnum opus — great work; said of someone’s masterpiece
  109. mala fide — in bad faith; said of an act done with knowledge of its illegality, or with intention to defraud or mislead someone; opposite of bona fide
  110. malum in se — wrong in itself; a legal term meaning that something is inherently wrong
  111. malum prohibitum — wrong due to being prohibited; a legal term meaning that something is only wrong because it is against the law
  112. mea culpa — my fault
  113. meliora — better things; carrying the connotation of “always better”
  114. memento mori — remember that [you will] die; was whispered by a servant into the ear of a victorious Roman general to check his pride as he paraded through cheering crowds after a victory; a genre of art meant to remind the viewer of the reality of his death
  115. memento vivere — remember to live
  116. memores acti prudentes future — mindful of what has been done, aware of what will be
  117. modus operandi — method of operating; abbreviated M.O.
  118. montani semper liberi — mountaineers [are] always free; state motto of West Virginia
  119. morior invictus — death before defeat
  120. morituri te salutant — those who are about to die salute you; popularized as a standard salute from gladiators to the emperor, but only recorded once in Roman history
  121. morte magis metuenda senectus — old age should rather be feared than death
  122. mulgere hircum — to milk a male goat; to attempt the impossible
  123. multa paucis — say much in few words
  124. nanos gigantum humeris insidentes — dwarfs standing on the shoulders of giants; commonly known by the letters of Isaac Newton: “If I have seen further it is by standing on the shoulders of giants”
  125. nec aspera terrent — they don’t terrify the rough ones; frightened by no difficulties; less literally “difficulties be damned”
  126. nec temere nec timide — neither reckless nor timid
  127. nil volentibus arduum — nothing [is] arduous for the willing
  128. nolo contendere — I do not wish to contend; that is, “no contest”; a plea that can be entered on behalf of a defendant in a court that states that the accused doesn’t admit guilt, but will accept punishment for a crime
  129. non ducor, duco — I am not led; I lead
  130. non loqui sed facere — not talk but action
  131. non progredi est regredi — to not go forward is to go backward
  132. non scholae, sed vitae discimus — we learn not for school, but for life; from Seneca
  133. non sequitur — it does not follow; in general, a comment which is absurd due to not making sense in its context (rather than due to being inherently nonsensical or internally inconsistent); often used in humor
  134. non sum qualis eram — I am not such as I was; or “I am not the kind of person I once was”
  135. nosce te ipsum — know thyself; from Cicero
  136. novus ordo seclorum — new order of the ages; from Virgil; motto on the Great Seal of the United States
  137. nulla tenaci invia est via — for the tenacious, no road is impassable
  138. obliti privatorum, publica curate — forget private affairs, take care of public ones; Roman political saying which reminds that common good should be given priority over private matters for any person having a responsibility in the State
  139. panem et circenses — bread and circuses; originally described all that was needed for emperors to placate the Roman mob; today used to describe any entertainment used to distract public attention from more important matters
  140. para bellum — prepare for war; if you want peace, prepare for war; if a country is ready for war, its enemies are less likely to attack
  141. parvis imbutus tentabis grandia tutus — when you are steeped in little things, you shall safely attempt great things; sometimes translated as, “once you have accomplished small things, you may attempt great ones safely”
  142. pater familias — father of the family; the eldest male in a family
  143. pecunia, si uti scis, ancilla est; si nescis, domina — if you know how to use money, money is your slave; if you don’t, money is your master
  144. per angusta ad augusta — through difficulties to greatness
  145. per annum — by the year
  146. per capita — by the person
  147. per diem — by the day
  148. per se — through itself
  149. persona non grata — person not pleasing; an unwelcome, unwanted or undesirable person
  150. pollice verso — with a turned thumb; used by Roman crowds to pass judgment on a defeated gladiator
  151. post meridiem — after noon; P.M.; used in timekeeping
  152. post mortem — after death
  153. postscriptum — thing having been written afterward; in writing, abbreviated P.S.
  154. praemonitus praemunitus — forewarned is forearmed
  155. praesis ut prosis ne ut imperes — lead in order to serve, not in order to rule
  156. primus inter pares — first among equals; a title of the Roman Emperors
  157. pro bono — for the good; in business, refers to services rendered at no charge
  158. pro rata — for the rate
  159. quam bene vivas referre (or refert), non quam diu — it is how well you live that matters, not how long; from Seneca
  160. quasi — as if; as though
  161. qui totum vult totum perdit — he who wants everything loses everything; attributed to Seneca
  162. quid agis — what’s going on; what’s up, what’s happening, etc.
  163. quid pro quo — this for that; an exchange of value
  164. quidquid Latine dictum sit altum videtur — whatever has been said in Latin seems deep; or “anything said in Latin sounds profound”; a recent ironic Latin phrase to poke fun at people who seem to use Latin phrases and quotations only to make themselves sound more important or “educated”
  165. quis custodiet ipsos custodes? — who will guard the guards themselves?; commonly associated with Plato
  166. quorum — of whom; the number of members whose presence is required under the rules to make any given meeting constitutional
  167. requiescat in pace — let him rest in peace; abbreviated R.I.P.
  168. rigor mortis — stiffness of death
  169. scientia ac labore — knowledge through hard work
  170. scientia ipsa potentia est — knowledge itself is power
  171. semper anticus — always forward
  172. semper fidelis — always faithful; U.S. Marines motto
  173. semper fortis — always brave
  174. semper paratus — always prepared
  175. semper virilis — always virile
  176. si vales, valeo — when you are strong, I am strong
  177. si vis pacem, para bellum — if you want peace, prepare for war
  178. sic parvis magna — greatness from small beginnings — motto of Sir Frances Drake
  179. sic semper tyrannis — thus always to tyrants; attributed to Brutus at the time of Julius Caesar’s assassination, and to John Wilkes Booth at the time of Abraham Lincoln’s assassination; whether it was actually said at either of these events is disputed
  180. sic vita est — thus is life; the ancient version of “it is what it is”
  181. sola fide — by faith alone
  182. sola nobilitat virtus — virtue alone ennobles
  183. solvitur ambulando — it is solved by walking
  184. spes bona — good hope
  185. statim (stat) — immediately; medical shorthand
  186. status quo — the situation in which; current condition
  187. subpoena — under penalty
  188. sum quod eris — I am what you will be; a gravestone inscription to remind the reader of the inevitability of death
  189. summa cum laude — with highest praise
  190. summum bonum — the supreme good
  191. suum cuique — to each his own
  192. tabula rasa — scraped tablet; “blank slate”; John Locke used the term to describe the human mind at birth, before it had acquired any knowledge
  193. tempora heroic — Heroic Age
  194. tempus edax rerum — time, devourer of all things
  195. tempus fugit — time flees; commonly mistranslated “time flies”
  196. terra firma — firm ground
  197. terra incognita — unknown land; used on old maps to show unexplored areas
  198. vae victis — woe to the conquered
  199. vanitas vanitatum omnia vanitas — vanity of vanities; everything [is] vanity; from the Bible (Ecclesiastes 1)
  200. veni vidi vici — I came, I saw, I conquered; famously said by Julius Caesar
  201. verbatim — repeat exactly
  202. veritas et aequitas — truth and equity
  203. versus — against
  204. veto — I forbid
  205. vice versa — to change or turn around
  206. vincit qui patitur — he conquers who endures
  207. vincit qui se vincit — he conquers who conquers himself
  208. vir prudens non contra ventum mingit — [a] wise man does not urinate [up] against the wind
  209. virile agitur — the manly thing is being done
  210. viriliter agite — act in a manly way
  211. viriliter agite estote fortes — quit ye like men, be strong
  212. virtus tentamine gaudet — strength rejoices in the challenge
  213. virtute et armis — by virtue and arms; or “by manhood and weapons”; state motto of Mississippi
  214. vive memor leti — live remembering death
  215. vivere est vincere — to live is to conquer; Captain John Smith’s personal motto
  216. vivere militare est — to live is to fight
  217. vox populi — voice of the people

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It’s guaranteed that you have or will run into some of these Latin terms in anything including the lightest reading. That’s because they’re everywhere. In newspapers, textbooks, manuals, et cetera. They are used in, inter alia, academic writing, text messaging, and, quite extensively, law documents. So, they are, ipso facto, very important to know. Ergo, we thought it’s a good idea to combine these Latin words and phrases in one place and explain what they mean so that when you run into some of them next time, you go like, ha! I have seen this word somewhere and I know what it means. So, let’s get down to it. 


1. a priori

A belief or conclusion based on assumptions or reasoning of some sort rather than actual experience or empirical evidence. Before actually encountering, experiencing, or observing a fact.

2. a posteriori. 

A fact, belief, or argument that is based on actual experience, experiment, or observation. After the fact.

3. ad astra.

To the stars.

4. ad hoc.

For a particular situation, without planning or consideration of some broader purpose or application.

5. ad hominem.

Directed to a particular person rather than generally, such as an attack on a person rather than a position they are espousing.

6. ad infinitum.

Repeat forever.

7. ad lib

Short for ad libitum. As you desire, at one’s pleasure. To speak or perform without preparation.

8. ad nauseam. 

Repetition that has become annoying or tiresome.


9. affidavit.

He has sworn. Sworn statement.

10. alma mater.

Nourishing, kind, bounteous mother. School from which one graduated.

11. alias.

Also known as. Otherwise known as. Less commonly as the proper meaning of at another time, otherwise.

12. alibi. 

In another place. Elsewhere. Reason one couldn’t have been in a location where an act was committed.

13. alter ego.

Other self. Another side of oneself.

14. A.D.

short for anno Domini. In the year of our Lord. Number of years since the birth of Jesus Christ.

15. a.m.

Short for ante meridiem. Before midday (noon.) Morning.

16. animus

Spirit, mind, courage anger. Animosity. Intense opposition and ill will towards something, somebody, or some social group, commonly emotional, passionate, and mean-spirited. Hatred.


17. ante

Before. Earlier. In a Supreme Court opinion, ante refers to an earlier page of the same opinion.

18. ante bellum.

Before the war.

19. ante mortem. 

Before death. 

20. bona fide.

Genuine. Real. With no intention to deceive.

21. c. / ca. / or cca.

Short for circa. Around. About. Approximately. Relative to a certain year.

22. carpe diem.

Seize the day or moment. Make the best of the present rather than delay or focus on the future.

23. caveat.

Warning, caution, disclaimer, or stipulation.

24. cf.

Short for confer. Compare to. In reference to, as a comparison.


25. cogito ergo sum

I think, therefore I am — Descartes.

26. consensus.

Agreement. General or widespread agreement.

27. corpus.

Body, especially of written or textual matter such as books and papers.

28. curriculum.

Race. Course of a race. Path of a race. Subjects comprising a course of academic study.

29. CV 

Short for curriculum vitae. The course of one’s life. Resume. List of significant academic and professional accomplishments, achievements, awards, education, and training.

30. de facto. 

True or matter of fact as it is, regardless of intent, good reason, authority, or official reason for being such.


31. dictum.

Something said. Noteworthy, authoritative statement or principle. Common wisdom.

32. doctor. 

Teacher. Learned person. Doctor.

33. ergo. 

Therefore.

34. et al. 

Short for et alia (neuter plural) or et alii (masculine plural) or et aliae (feminine plural). And others. And all of the others.

35. etc. 

Short for et cetera.

36. e pluribus unum. 

— Out of many, one — U.S. motto.

37. ex post.

After.

38. ex post facto.

After the fact.


39. e.g. 

Short for exempli gratia. For the sake of example. For example.

40. ibid. 

Short for ibidem or ib idem. In the same place. For a citation, indicates that it is from the same place as the preceding citation.

41. id. 

short for idem. From the same source. For a citation, indicates that it is from the same source, but not from the same location in that source. In contrast to ibidem (ibid.) which means the same location or place in the same source as the preceding citation.

42. i.e. 

Short for id est. That is. In other words.

43. in absentia. 

Conducted in the absence of.

44. in camera. 

In chambers. In private, commonly for legal proceedings, in the judge’s office (chambers.) before digital photography cameras were little “chambers.”

45. in situ. 

In position. In place.

46. in toto. 

As a whole. Entirely. All of it.

47. incognito. 

Unknown. With one’s identity concealed. This is actually an Italian word, derived from the Latin word incognitus.


48. inter alia. 

Among others. Among other things.

49. innuendo. 

By nodding. Implied. Indirectly implied. Suggested. Oblique allusion.

50. intra. 

Within. In a Supreme Court opinion, refers to a decision of another court, typically an appeals court.

51. ipso facto. 

By that very fact or act. Therefore.

51. lingua franca. 

Common language in a multi-language environment. Technically, it’s Italian.

52. magnum opus. 

Great work. Greatest work. Masterpiece.

53. M.O. 

short for modus operandi. Mode or method of operation. How you do things.

54. n.b. or N.B. 

short for nota bene. Note well. It is worth noting that.


55. per capita. 

Per person, for each person, of a population. Individually, but not for any particular person.

56. per cent. 

or percent short for per centum. For each one hundred.

57. per se. 

By itself. Intrinsically. Specifically.

58. p.m. / PM 

short for post meridiem. After midday (noon.) Afternoon.

59. post. 

After. Later. In a Supreme Court opinion, post refers to a later page of the same opinion.

60. post mortem. 

After death.


61. prima facie. 

On its face. Accepted on its face. Accepted as true based on initial impression. Accepted as true unless proven false.

62. PS. 

short for post scriptum. Written after. After what has been written. In addition to what has been written. In addition.

63. quasi. 

As if. As though. Resembling. Similar but not quite exactly the same. Having many but not all the features of.

64. quid pro quo. 

This for that. An exchange of goods or services. A barter transaction. Any contractual transaction.

65. sic 

or [sic]. So, this. The previous word should be taken literally even if it is not correct or appropriate.

66. stat. 

or stat short for statim. Immediately. Now. without delay.

67. status quo. 

The existing state of affairs. As it is. As things are.


68. stricto sensu

or sensu stricto. In a narrow, tight, or strict sense. Strictly speaking.

69. sui generis. 

Of its own kind. Unique. Outside of existing categories. In law, outside of existing law.

70. supra. 

Above. From the previous cited source.

71. tabula rasa. 

Clean slate. Blank slate. Absence of any preconceived notions, ideas, goals, or purpose.

72. veni, vidi, vici. 

I came, I saw, I conquered.

73. verbatim. 

The same exact words. Literally.

74. vs. 

short for versus. Against. In opposition to. As opposed to. In contrast to.

75. veto. 

I forbid. Reject.

76. vice versa. 

As well as the two immediately preceding subjects of a statement reversed. The same either way. The other way around.

77. viz. 

short for videre licet or videlicet. Namely. That is.

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Latin words and phrases are widely used in English as scientific terms in medicine, biology, law, logic, philosophy, and other sciences. But many Latin expressions are familiar and understandable to the general reader.

The list below provides some common Latin expressions, abbreviations, and sayings. Note: Some Latin abbreviations are given with description and examples of use in the material Abbreviations in the section Miscellany.

Латинские слова и выражения широко употребляются в английском языке как научные термины в медицине, биологии, юриспруденции, логике, философии и других науках. Но многие латинские выражения знакомы и понятны широкому читателю.

Список ниже приводит некоторые общеизвестные латинские выражения, сокращения и изречения. Примечание: Некоторые латинские сокращения даны с описанием и примерами употребления в материале Abbreviations в разделе Miscellany.

Latin English Russian ab incunabulis from the cradle с колыбели; с самого начала ab initio from the beginning с самого начала abusus non tollit usum Abuse does not cancel use. Злоупотребление не отменяет (нормального) употребления. Actus Dei the act of God, i.e., unforeseen and irresistible natural forces; force majeure Божье деяние, т.е. непредвиденные и неодолимые природные силы; форс-мажор A.D.; AD (anno Domini) in the year of our Lord; since Christ was born (see B.C.) н.э. (наша эра, нашей эры); от рождества Христова (см. B.C.) ad absurdum to the point of absurdity до абсурда ad captandum vulgus in order to please the mob в угоду толпе ad gustum to taste по вкусу ad hoc for this case only только для данного случая ad infinitum (ad inf.; ad infin.) to infinity; endlessly; without limit до бесконечности; без конца ad initium (ad init.) at the beginning в начале ad interim (ad int.) in the meantime; temporary тем временем; временный; на данное время ad libitum (ad lib.) at one’s pleasure; according to one’s wish по желанию; как угодно; сколько угодно ad nauseam to a sickening degree до тошноты alias another name; at another time; at another place; otherwise другое имя; в другое время; в другом месте; иначе alma mater nourishing mother, i.e., the school, college, or university that a person attended мать-кормилица, т.е. школа, колледж или университет, в котором человек учился alter ego a second self; another self; a very close friend второе я; другое я; очень близкий друг a.m.; A.M. (ante meridiem) before noon (see p.m.) до полудня (см. p.m.) amicus Plato, sed magis amica veritas Plato is my friend, but truth is a greater friend of mine. (Aristotle) Платон мне друг, но истина мне больший друг. (Аристотель) anguis in herba a snake in the grass, i.e., hidden danger; insidious enemy змея в траве, т.е. скрытая опасность; коварный тайный враг a priori existing before or independently of observation or experience априори; заранее; существующий до или независимо от опыта a posteriori based upon observation or experience апостериори; основанный на наблюдении или опыте aqua pura pure water чистая вода aqua vitae water of life, i.e., strong alcohol вода жизни, т.е. крепкий алкоголь argumentum ad crumenam argument to the purse, i.e., argument appealing to someone’s material interests аргумент к кошельку, т.е. рассчитанный на чью-то материальную заинтересованность argumentum ad hominem argument to the man, i.e., argument appealing to feelings, emotions, prejudices, special interests аргумент к человеку, т.е. рассчитанный на чувства, эмоции, предубеждения, особые интересы argumentum ad ignorantiam argument relying on someone’s ignorance of facts аргумент к невежеству, т.е. рассчитанный на чью-то неосведомленность argumentum ad misericordiam argument to pity, i.e., argument intended to cause the feeling of pity аргумент к жалости, т.е. рассчитанный на то, чтобы вызвать чувство жалости argumentum baculinum baculine argument; baculine method of argumentation палочный аргумент; убеждение палкой, с позиции силы aut Caesar aut nihil Either Caesar or nothing. All or nothing. Или Цезарь, или ничто. Все или ничего. aut vincere aut mori Either to win or to die. Или победить, или умереть. B.C., BC (before Christ) before Christ; before Christ was born (see A.D.) до н.э. (до нашей эры); до рождества Христова (см. A.D.) bellum omnium contra omnes war of all against all война всех против всех beneficia non obtruduntur Benefactions are not imposed. Благодеяния не навязывают. bis dat, qui cito dat He gives twice who gives promptly. Тот дает вдвойне, кто дает быстро. bona fide in good faith; without fraud добросовестный; честный; настоящий carpe diem Seize the day. (i.e., enjoy the present) (Horace) Лови день. (т.е. пользуйся жизнью; живи настоящим) (Гораций) casus belli cause for war повод к войне, казус белли ceteris paribus other things being equal при прочих равных cf. (confer) compare with (this example) сравните с (этим примером) circa (c.; ca.) around; approximately (about a date) около; приблизительно (о дате) cogito ergo sum I think, therefore I am. (Descartes) Я мыслю, следовательно существую. (Декарт) compos mentis in sound mind в здравом уме consensus gentium agreement of the people согласие народа coram populo in the presence of the people; openly; publicly при народе; открыто; публично corpus delicti corpus delicti; facts and material evidence as proof of crime состав преступления; вещественные доказательства, улики cui bono for whose benefit? in whose interests? to what purpose? кому от этого польза? в чьих интересах? с какой целью? cum grano salis with a grain of salt; skeptically; not too seriously скептически; с крупицей недоверия; не слишком серьезно cum laude with praise; with honors (about diplomas) с похвалой; с отличием (о дипломах) curriculum vitae a brief biographical resume of one’s life and career краткое биографическое описание жизни и карьеры de facto in reality; in fact; actual в действительности; фактически; де-факто Dei gratia by the grace of God божьей милостью de gustibus non est disputandum No disputing about tastes. О вкусах не спорят. de jure by right; according to law по праву; по закону; де-юре de mortuis aut bene aut nihil About the dead, either well or nothing. О мертвых или хорошее, или ничего. de mortuis nil nisi bonum Say nothing but good of the dead. Не говори ничего кроме хорошего о мертвых. divide et impera Divide and rule. Разделяй и властвуй. dum spiro spero While I breathe, I hope. (Cicero) Пока дышу, надеюсь. (Цицерон) dum vivimus vivamus While we live, let us live (to the full). Пока живем, давайте жить (в полной мере). dura lex, sed lex The law is harsh, but it is the law. Закон суров, но это закон. e.g. (exempli gratia) for example; for instance например e pluribus unum Out of many, one. (motto of the United States) Из многих – одно. (девиз США) errare humanum est To err is human. (Seneca) Ошибаться свойственно человеку. (Сенека) est modus in rebus There is a measure in things. (Horace) У всех вещей есть мера, предел. (Гораций) et al. (et alii; et alibi) and others; and elsewhere и другие; и в других местах etc. (et cetera) and others; and the like; and so on; and so forth и др. (и другие); и т. п. (и тому подобное); и т. д. (и так далее) et tu, Brute! And you, Brutus! (Caesar) И ты, Брут! (Цезарь) ex animo from the heart; sincerely от души; искренне ex libris from the books of; from the library of (someone) из книг (кого-то); из библиотеки (кого-то); экслибрис ex nihilo nihil fit Nothing is created from nothing. (Lucretius) Из ничего ничего не создается. (Лукреций) ex post facto from what is done afterward исходя из последующего; имеющий обратную силу fac simile make similar; make the like (origin of facsimile; fax) сделай подобное (отсюда факсимиле; факс) factum est factum A fact is a fact. Факт остается фактом. falsus in uno, falsus in omnibus False in one thing, false in everything. Фальшивый в одном, фальшивый во всем. festina lente Hurry slowly. (Augustus) Поспешай медленно. (Август) fortes fortuna juvat Fortune favors the brave. Смелым судьба помогает. genius loci guardian spirit of a place; peculiar character or atmosphere of a place дух-хранитель места; особый характер или атмосфера какого-то места graecum est, non legitur It’s in Greek, can’t be read. Это по-гречески, не читается. gratis free of charge бесплатно, даром habeas corpus a court order requiring that a prisoner be brought before the court to investigate the legality of his detention судебный приказ о доставке в суд арестованного для выяснения законности его задержания homo homini lupus est Man is a wolf to man. (Plautus) Человек человеку волк. (Плавт) homo proponit, sed Deus disponit Man proposes, God disposes. Человек предполагает, а Бог располагает. homo sapiens man; a thinking human being человек; разумное, мыслящее существо homo sum, et humani nihil a me alienum puto I am human, and nothing human is foreign to me. (Terence) Я человек, и ничто человеческое мне не чуждо. (Теренций) ibid. (ibidem) in the same place (of the book, chapter) там же; в том же месте (книги, главы) i.e. (id est) that is; in other words т. е. (то есть); другими словами in esse actually existing существующий in flagrante delicto in the very act of committing the crime; caught red-handed в момент совершения преступления; пойманный с поличным in loco delicti at the very place of the crime на месте преступления in loco parentis in the place of a parent; replacing a parent в качестве родителя; вместо родителя in memoriam (in mem.) in memory of в память о in omnia paratus ready for everything готов ко всему in posse in possible existence; potential возможный; потенциальный in situ in its original place and position в месте нахождении; непосредственно на месте in toto as a whole; wholly; totally в целом; целиком; полностью in vino veritas There is truth in wine. (i.e., wine loosens your tongue) Истина в вине. (т.е. вино развязывает язык) in vitro in a test tube; in laboratory conditions (about experiments) в пробирке; в лабораторных условиях (об экспериментах) in vivo inside a living organism; in real-life environment (about experiments) внутри живого организма; в естественной среде (об экспериментах) ipse dixit He himself said it. Meaning: blind belief in the rightness of some authority’s opinion. Он сам это сказал. Значение: слепая вера в правоту мнения авторитета. ipso facto by the fact itself; by the very fact в силу самого факта; тем самым labor omnia vincit Work conquers all. Труд все побеждает. lapsus calami a slip of the pen описка lapsus linguae a slip of the tongue обмолвка, оговорка lapsus memoriae a slip of memory; a lapse of memory ошибка памяти; провал в памяти lb. (libra) pound (measure of weight) фунт (мера веса) lex non scripta unwritten law неписаный закон magnum opus a great work; an outstanding work крупное, выдающееся произведение mala fide in bad faith; with the intent to deceive нечестно; с намерением обмануть mea culpa my fault моя вина; по моей вине memento mori Remember about death. Помни о смерти. mens sana in corpore sano A sound mind in a sound body. Здоровый дух в здоровом теле. modus operandi mode of operating or work образ действий; метод modus vivendi manner of living; method of living образ жизни; способ проживания multum in parvo much in little многое в малом mutatis mutandis with the necessary changes made с внесенными изменениями, поправками nihil novi nothing new ничего нового nil desperandum Never despair. Никогда не отчаиваться. nolens volens / volens nolens willingly or unwillingly; willy-nilly волей-неволей non compos mentis not in sound mind не в своем уме; невменяемый non sequitur It does not follow from the premises. (about a comment or conclusion) Не следует из упомянутого. (о замечании или выводе) nosce te ipsum Know thyself. Познай себя. nota bene (N.B.; NB; n.b.) Note well. Take notice. Заметь хорошо. Обрати внимание. novus rex, novus lex New king, new law. Новый царь, новый закон. nulla regula sine excepcione No rule is without exception. (Seneca) Нет правила без исключения. (Сенека) nulli secundus second to none никем не превзойденный obscurum per obscurius the obscure (explained) through the more obscure неясное (объяснено) через еще более неясное omnia mea mecum porto All that is mine I carry with me. Все свое ношу с собой. omnia vincit amor Love conquers all. (Vergil / Virgil) Любовь побеждает все. (Вергилий) O tempora! O mores! O times! O customs! (Cicero) О времена! О нравы! (Цицерон) pater familias / paterfamilias father of the family; head of the household отец семейства; глава семьи pecunia non olet / non olet pecunia Money has no smell. Деньги не пахнут. per annum yearly; by the year ежегодно; в год per aspera ad astra To the stars through difficulties. Через тернии к звездам. per capita per head; for the individual person на человека; на душу населения per diem by the day; allowance per day on a business trip ежедневно; суточные в командировке per os through the mouth; by mouth (indicating the method of taking medicines) внутрь; через рот; перорально (указание способа приема лекарств) perpetuum mobile something in perpetual motion что-то в постоянном движении; вечный двигатель per se in itself; by itself; of itself как таковой; само по себе; по сути persona non grata an undesirable person персона нон грата; нежелательное лицо p.m.; P.M. (post meridiem) after noon (see a.m.) после полудня (см a.m.) post factum after something was done; after the event took place постфактум; после сделанного; задним числом post mortem after death; post-mortem после смерти; аутопсия primus inter pares first among equals первый среди равных pro bono publico / pro bono for the public good, i.e., work done free of charge для общественного блага, т.е. работа, делаемая бесплатно pro et contra pro and con; in favor of and against за и против pro forma according to form по форме; формальный pro rata proportionately пропорционально P.S.; PS; p.s. (post scriptum) postscript; addition to a letter after the signature постскриптум; добавление к письму после подписи quasi as if; seeming; resembling как будто, якобы; кажущийся; квази quid pro quo a favor in return for a favor; one thing in return for another; a substitute услуга за услугу; что-то взамен чего-то; заменитель qui pro quo one thing instead of another (i.e., a misunderstanding, a mix-up) одно вместо другого (т.е. недоразумение, путаница) quis custodiet ipsos custodes? Who shall guard the guards themselves? Who shall watch the watchmen? (Plato) Кто будет сторожить самих сторожей? Кто будет наблюдать за наблюдателями? (Платон) quo animo? With what intention? С каким намерением? quod erat demonstrandum which was to be demonstrated or proved что и требовалось доказать quo jure? By what right? По какому праву? quo modo? In what way? How? Каким образом? Как? rara avis rare bird; unusual person or thing редкая птица; необычный человек или вещь re concerning; with reference to относительно; ссылаясь на reductio ad absurdum reduction to the absurdity (to show a mistake in logic) доведение до абсурда (для показа ошибки в логике) repetitio est mater studiorum Repetition is the mother of learning. Повторение – мать учения. requiescat in pace (R.I.P.) May he rest in peace. Rest in peace. Мир праху его. Покойся с миром. rigor mortis the stiffness of a dead body трупное окоченение sancta simplicitas holy simplicity святая простота sanctum sanctorum the holy of holies святая святых scientia est potentia Knowledge is power. (Francis Bacon) Знание – сила. (Фрэнсис Бэкон) semper idem always the same всегда один и тот же sic transit gloria mundi Thus passes away the glory of this world. Так проходит мирская слава. sic vita est Such is life. Такова жизнь. similia similibus curantur Likes are cured by likes. Like cures like. Similar things are cured by similar things Подобное лечится подобным. sine anno; sine loco; sine nomine without a year; without a place; without a name (about publications) без указания года; без указания места; без имени (об изданиях) sine cura without care; sinecure без забот; синекура; тепленькое местечко sine qua non essential, indispensable condition обязательное, непременное условие si vis pacem, para bellum If you want peace, prepare for war. (Vegetius) Если хочешь мира, готовься к войне. (Вегетий) status in statu a state in a state государство в государстве status quo the existing state of affairs статус-кво; существующее положение дел subpoena under penalty; an order for a person to appear before the court под страхом наказания; повестка о явке в суд sub rosa under the rose; secretly; privately; confidentially под розой; тайно; конфиденциально summa summarum sum of sums; all in all; the final total сумма сумм; конечный, окончательный итог super omnia veritas Truth is above all. Истина превыше всего. suum cuique To each his own. Каждому свое. tabula rasa a blank slate; a mind not yet affected by knowledge or experience чистая дощечка; ум, еще не затронутый знанием или опытом tacito consensu with silent consent с молчаливого согласия tempora mutantur et nos mutamur in illis The times change, and we change with them. Времена меняются, и мы меняемся с ними. tempus edax rerum Time, the devourer of all things. (Ovid) Время, поглотитель всего. (Овидий) tempus fugit Time flees. Time flies. Время бежит. Время летит. terra firma solid earth (not water or air) твердая земля (не вода, не воздух) terra incognita unknown land or subject неизвестная страна или тема tertium non datur The third is not given. Третьего не дано. tertium quid a third something; an intermediate thing or person нечто третье; что-то промежуточное; некто третий tertius gaudens the rejoicing third; a third party that benefits from the fight of two opponents третий радующийся; третья сторона, которая извлекает выгоду из борьбы двух противников testimonium paupertatis evidence of poverty; meaning mental poverty, narrow-mindedness свидетельство о бедности; имеется в виду бедность ума, ограниченность мышления testis unus, testis nullus One witness is no witness. Один свидетель – не свидетель. timeo Danaos et dona ferentes I fear the Greeks even when they bear gifts. (Vergil / Virgil) Боюсь данайцев, даже дары приносящих. (Вергилий) ultima ratio regum the final argument of kings, i.e., war последний довод королей, т.е. война usus est magister optimus Practice is the best teacher. Практика – лучший наставник. vade mecum a handbook or manual that someone carries around карманный справочник, который носят при себе vanitas vanitatum vanity of vanities суета сует veni, vidi, vici I came, I saw, I conquered. (Caesar) Пришел, увидел, победил. (Цезарь) verbatim et literatim word for word and letter for letter; verbatim; in exactly the same words (повторить) в точности теми же словами versus (vs.; v.) against против vice versa (v.v.) the other way around наоборот vide ante; vide post; vide infra; vide supra see before; see after; see below; see above (directions to a reader of a text) смотри перед; смотри после; смотри ниже; смотри выше (указания читателю текста) viva voce orally; e.g., the oral part of an examination устно; например, устная часть экзамена vivere est cogitare To live is to think. (Cicero) Жить – значит мыслить. (Цицерон) vox populi the voice of the people глас народа; общественное мнение

Note: There were no commas in the original Latin expressions. In many sources, commas are used in Latin expressions for easier reading.

Примечание: В латинских выражениях не было запятых в оригинале. Во многих источниках запятые ставятся в латинских выражениях для более легкого прочтения.

Latin is a dead language, they say. Much like the great Empires of the past, it’s art (which language is as well) usually dies with it. Unless you work in a medical environment, nobody uses Latin anymore.

Which is a shame because latin words and latin phrases still carry a lot of punch.

They don’t just make you sound cool (which is a proven fact), they carry the power of the men of the past. But why bother with it?

Why should you know Latin words and Latin phrases?

painting ancient rome

Latin was the language used when all the greatness was existing in the West. From about the 16th century until the middle of the 20th century, Latin was taught or was the common language. Great men of the past which’ books we still read today wrote them in Latin.

Big discoveries and innovations were written in Latin, and till today we still use many phrases in every day communication. Things such as “ad hoc,” “ad nauseam,” “versus,” “veto,” and “post meridiem (P.M.).”

Why wokeism killed Latin

Until the middle of the 20th century, Latin was still taught virtually everywhere, despite the fact the vernacular (common language) was already used in many art-forms. This slowly eroded the meaning of the high language Latin.

We actually see a similar effect these days. Since marketing intentionally writes language for 6th graders to understand (to reach more people with their product, maximizing profit) and nobody reads books anymore, the general vocabulary of the average people keeps declining.

This, however, was only the beginning. It was, again, misguided college students. Beginning in the 1960s (good times create weak men), where college students demanded that the curriculum is more “open, inclusive,” and less Euro-centric, the decline of Latin was sealed.

Again, by trying to include everyone, greatness is killed.

A method we see again these days with the woke left that kills a countries’ culture by including everyone.

Except for a few phrases which still exist in the English language itself, nobody uses Latin anymore, except in medical environments. And if people use the Latin in the common language, they don’t know the real meaning, I.e. carpe diem.

Knowing Latin Phrases improves your vocabulary

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Most of the English prefixes and many root words are derived from Latin. If you come across one of the phrases below in every day life, you will then understand it more profoundly and the correct meaning of it.

Latin improves your foreign language vocabulary as well. I am not a native English speaker, but once I learned that PM used in timekeeping stands for “post meridiem” I could make much more sense of the abbreviation. It “sticks” better in my mind than connecting “after noon” with “PM.”

If you happen to visit Spain, Italy, France, or many other European countries, you will notice that many of their words are directly derived from Latin. Knowing Latin itself would help you learn these languages as well.

Studies have also shown that people proficient in the ancient language scored better in college tests and seem to have elevated IQ. This has also later been confirmed by a great book “Hot to multiply your baby’s intelligence.” In this book (which I have read) the basic discovery was that the sooner and the more your baby hears and reads words, the higher its IQ will be.

Imagine the mind as a huge sponge, the more input (water) it has, the more connections can be made, the more can pour out in any situation you come across.

“Latin is a hard language!”

It is, yes. That is the point. labor omnia vincit – Hard work conquers all.

Knowing and understanding a high language like Latin or even just the meaning of Latin words and phrases elevates your mind and yourself above the common peasant. I use that word intentionally. Our society prides itself on being advanced and “above” the cast system, but that is a comforting lie.

Slavery was never abolished. It’s just not physical slavery anymore. It is slavery for your mind. You, as a wage slave is deemed below the political and rich cast. Part of it is due to the fact that you cannot converse as they do.

Ever felt insignificant when a Doctor is throwing around Latin words about your condition?

Knowing Latin words increases your vocabulary and thus cognitive ability. It is hard to learn. But hard things usually yield great results and benefits.

Below is a list of over 150 Latin words and Latin phrases. This list isn’t exhaustive, obviously. But going through it, you will realize a lot of Latin words we use every day, and this alone should elevate your knowledge, IQ, and language.

Latin Words and Phrases every man should know

  1. a priori — from what comes before; knowledge or justification is independent of experience
  2. acta non verba — actions, not words
  3. ad hoc — to this — improvised or made up
  4. ad hominem — to the man; below-the-belt personal attack rather than a reasoned argument
  5. ad honorem — for honor
  6. ad infinitum — to infinity
  7. ad nauseam — used to describe an argument that has been taking place to the point of nausea
  8. ad victoriam — to victory; more commonly translated into “for victory,” this was a battle cry of the Romans
  9. alea iacta est — the die has been cast
  10. alias — at another time; an assumed name or pseudonym
  11. alibi — elsewhere
  12. alma mater — nourishing mother; used to denote one’s college/university
  13. amor patriae — love of one’s country
  14. annuit coeptis –He (God) nods at things being begun; or “he approves our undertakings,” motto on the reverse of the Great Seal of the United States and on the back of the United States one-dollar bill
  15. ante bellum — before the war;
  16. ante meridiem — before noon; A.M., used in timekeeping
  17. aqua vitae — water of life; was also used for Whiskey in Scotland for example
  18. arte et marte — by skill and valour
  19. astra inclinant, sed non obligant — the stars incline us, they do not bind us; refers to the strength of free will over astrological determinism
  20. audemus jura nostra defendere — we dare to defend our rights; state motto of Alabama
  21. audere est facere — to dare is to do
  22. audio — I hear
  23. aut cum scuto aut in scuto — either with shield or on shield; do or die, “no retreat”; said by Spartan mothers to their sons as they departed for battle
  24. aut neca aut necare — either kill or be killed
  25. aut viam inveniam aut faciam — I will either find a way or make one; said by Hannibal, the great ancient military commander
  26. barba non facit philosophum — a beard doesn’t make one a philosopher
  27. bis dat qui cito dat — he gives twice, who gives promptly; a gift given without hesitation is as good as two gifts
  28. bona fide — good faith
  29. bono malum superate — overcome evil with good
  30. carpe diem — seize the day
  31. caveat emptor — let the buyer beware; the purchaser is responsible for checking whether the goods suit his need
  32. circa — around, or approximately
  33. citius altius forties — faster, higher, stronger; modern Olympics motto
  34. cogito ergo sum — “I think therefore I am”; famous quote by Rene Descartes
  35. corpus christi — body of Christ
  36. corruptissima re publica plurimae leges — when the republic is at its most corrupt the laws are most numerous; said by Tacitus
  37. creatio ex nihilo — creation out of nothing; a concept about creation, often used in a theological or philosophical context
  38. cura te ipsum — take care of your own self; first look at your own issues, before you help others, I.e. being “selfish”
  39. curriculum vitae — the course of one’s life; in business, a lengthened resume
  40. de facto — from the fact;
  41. deo volente — God willing
  42. deus ex machina — God out of a machine; a term meaning a conflict is resolved in improbable or implausible ways, often used in movies
  43. dictum factum — what is said is done
  44. discendo discimus — while teaching we learn
  45. docendo disco, scribendo cogito — I learn by teaching, think by writing
  46. ductus exemplo — leadership by example
  47. ducunt volentem fata, nolentem trahunt — the fates lead the willing and drag the unwilling; attributed to Lucius Annaeus Seneca
  48. dulce bellum inexpertis — war is sweet to the inexperienced
  49. dulcius ex asperis — sweeter after difficulties
  50. emeritus — veteran; retired from office
  51. ergo — therefore
  52. et alii — and others; abbreviated et al.
  53. et cetera — and the others
  54. et tu, Brute? — last words of Caesar after being murdered by friend Brutus in Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar, used today to convey utter betrayal
  55. ex animo — from the heart; thus, “sincerely”
  56. ex libris — from the library of; to mark books from a library
  57. ex nihilo — out of nothing
  58. ex post facto — from a thing done afterward; said of a law with retroactive effect
  59. faber est suae quisque fortunae — every man is the artisan of his own fortune; quote by Appius Claudius Caecus
  60. fac fortia et patere — do brave deeds and endure
  61. flectere si nequeo superos, acheronta movebo — if I cannot move heaven I will raise hell; from Virgil’s Aeneid
  62. fortes fortuna adiuvat — fortune favors the bold
  63. fortis in arduis — strong in difficulties
  64. gloria in excelsis Deo — glory to God in the highest
  65. habemus papam — we have a pope; used after a Catholic Church papal election to announce publicly a successful ballot to elect a new pope
  66. historia vitae magistra — history, the teacher of life; from Cicero;
  67. hoc est bellum — this is war
  68. honor virtutis praemium — esteem is the reward of virtue
  69. hostis humani generis — enemy of the human race; Cicero defined pirates in Roman law as being enemies of humanity in general
  70. humilitas occidit superbiam — humility conquers pride
  71. igne natura renovatur integra — through fire, nature is reborn whole
  72. ignis aurum probat — fire tests gold; a phrase referring to the refining of character through difficult circumstances, I.e. struggle
  73. in absentia — in the absence
  74. in aqua sanitas — in water there is health
  75. in flagrante delicto — in flaming crime; caught red-handed, or in the act
  76. in memoriam — into the memory; more commonly “in memory of”
  77. in omnia paratus — ready for anything
  78. in situ — in position; something that exists in an original or natural state
  79. in toto — in all or entirely
  80. in umbra, igitur, pugnabimus — then we will fight in the shade; made famous by Spartans in the battle of Thermopylae and by the movie 300
  81. in utero — in the womb
  82. in vitro — in glass; biological process that occurs in the lab
  83. incepto ne desistam — may I not shrink from my purpose
  84. intelligenti pauca — few words suffice for he who understands
  85. invicta — unconquered
  86. invictus maneo — I remain unvanquished
  87. labor omnia vincit — hard work conquers all
  88. labore et honore — by labor and honor
  89. leges sine moribus vanae — laws without morals [are] vain
  90. lex parsimoniae — law of succinctness; also known as Occam’s Razor; the simplest explanation is usually the correct one
  91. lex talionis — the law of retaliation
  92. magna cum laude — with great praise
  93. magna est vis consuetudinis — great is the power of habit
  94. magnum opus — great work; said of someone’s masterpiece
  95. mala fide — in bad faith; said of an act done with knowledge of its illegality; opposite of bona fide
  96. malum in se — wrong in itself; a legal term
  97. malum prohibitum — wrong due to being prohibited; a legal term meaning that something is only wrong because it is against the law
  98. manifestum (the Italian “manifesto” is more common) — a published declaration of intentions
  99. mea culpa — my fault
  100. meliora — better things; carrying the connotation of “always better”
  101. memento mori — remember that [you will] die; was whispered by a servant into the ear of a victorious Roman general to check his pride as he paraded through cheering crowds after a victory;
  102. memento vivere — remember to live
  103. memores acti prudentes future — mindful of what has been done, aware of what will be
  104. modus operandi — method of operating; abbreviated M.O.
  105. morior invictus — death before defeat
  106. morte magis metuenda senectus — old age should rather be feared than death
  107. mulgere hircum — to milk a male goat; to attempt the impossible
  108. multa paucis — say much in few words
  109. nanos gigantum humeris insidentes — dwarfs standing on the shoulders of giants;
  110. nec aspera terrent — they don’t terrify the rough ones; frightened by no difficulties; less literally “difficulties be damned”
  111. nec temere nec timide — neither reckless nor timid
  112. nil volentibus arduum — nothing [is] arduous for the willing
  113. non ducor, duco — I am not led; I lead
  114. non progredi est regredi — to not go forward is to go backward
  115. non scholae, sed vitae discimus — we learn not for school, but for life; from Seneca
  116. non sum qualis eram — I am not such as I was; or “I am not the kind of person I once was”
  117. nosce te ipsum — know thyself; from Cicero, also seen in The Matrix
  118. novus ordo seclorum — new order of the ages; from Virgil; motto on the Great Seal of the United States
  119. nulla tenaci invia est via — for the tenacious, no road is impassable
  120. panem et circenses — bread and circuses; originally described all that was needed for emperors to placate the Roman mob; these days used to describe the easy pleasures people indulge in to be “satisfied” with their life and don’t revolt since they are blind to real issues
  121. para bellum — prepare for war; if you want peace, prepare for war; if a country is ready for war, its enemies are less likely to attack
  122. pater familias — father of the family; the eldest male in a family; the patriarch
  123. pecunia, si uti scis, ancilla est; si nescis, domina — if you know how to use money, money is your slave; if you don’t, money is your master
  124. per annum — by the year
  125. per capita — by the person
  126. per diem — by the day
  127. per se — through itself
  128. persona non grata — person not pleasing; an unwelcome, unwanted or undesirable person
  129. pollice verso — with a turned thumb; used by Roman crowds to pass judgment on a defeated gladiator
  130. post meridiem — after noon; P.M.; used in timekeeping
  131. post mortem — after death
  132. postscriptum — thing having been written afterward; in writing, abbreviated P.S.
  133. praemonitus praemunitus — forewarned is forearmed
  134. praesis ut prosis ne ut imperes — lead in order to serve, not in order to rule
  135. primus inter pares — first among equals; a title of the Roman Emperors
  136. pro bono — for the good; in business, refers to services rendered at no charge
  137. quam bene vivas referre (or refert), non quam diu — it is how well you live that matters, not how long; from Seneca
  138. quasi — as if; as though
  139. qui totum vult totum perdit — he who wants everything loses everything; attributed to Seneca
  140. quid pro quo — this for that; an exchange of value
  141. quis custodiet ipsos custodes? — who will guard the guards themselves?; commonly associated with Plato
  142. requiescat in pace — let him rest in peace; abbreviated R.I.P.
  143. rigor mortis — stiffness of death
  144. scientia ac labore — knowledge through hard work
  145. scientia ipsa potentia est — knowledge itself is power
  146. semper anticus — always forward
  147. semper fidelis — always faithful; U.S. Marines motto
  148. semper fortis — always brave
  149. semper paratus — always prepared
  150. semper virilis — always virile
  151. si vales, valeo — when you are strong, I am strong
  152. si vis pacem, para bellum — if you want peace, prepare for war
  153. sic parvis magna — greatness from small beginnings — motto of Sir Frances Drake
  154. sic vita est — thus is life; the ancient version of “it is what it is”
  155. sola fide — by faith alone
  156. sola nobilitat virtus — virtue alone ennobles
  157. status quo — the situation in which; current condition
  158. subpoena — under penalty
  159. sum quod eris — I am what you will be; a gravestone inscription to remind the reader of the inevitability of death
  160. summa cum laude — with highest praise
  161. summum bonum — the supreme good
  162. tabula rasa — scraped tablet; “blank slate”; John Locke used the term to describe the human mind at birth, before it had acquired any knowledge, in German this is used for “chaotic moments”
  163. tempora heroic — Heroic Age
  164. tempus edax rerum — time, devourer of all things
  165. tempus fugit — time flees; commonly mistranslated “time flies”
  166. terra incognita — unknown land; used on old maps to show unexplored areas
  167. vae victis — woe to the conquered
  168. veni vidi vici — I came, I saw, I conquered; famously said by Julius Caesar
  169. verbatim — repeat exactly
  170. veritas et aequitas — truth and equity
  171. versus — against
  172. veto — I forbid
  173. vice versa — to change or turn around
  174. vincit qui se vincit — he conquers who conquers himself (*cough* selfconquering)
  175. virile agitur — the manly thing is being done
  176. viriliter agite — act in a manly way
  177. virtus tentamine gaudet — strength rejoices in the challenge
  178. virtute et armis — by virtue and arms; or “by manhood and weapons”; state motto of Mississippi
  179. vive memor leti — live remembering death
  180. vivere est vincere — to live is to conquer; Captain John Smith’s personal motto
  181. vivere militare est — to live is to fight
  182. vox populi — voice of the people
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