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List of Latin phrases (B)

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Revision as of 16:23, 3 June 2025 by WikiKnight (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{Short description|none}} {{citations needed|date=January 2021}} {{latin intro|B}}<onlyinclude> {| class="wikitable" |- !Latin!!Translation!!Notes |- |{{Anchor|barba crescit caput nescit}}{{Lang|la|barba crescit caput nescit}}||beard grows, head doesn't grow wiser|| |- |{{Anchor|barba non facit philosophum}}{{Lang|la|barba non facit philosophum}}||a beard doesn't make one a philosopher||Wise only in appearance. From Aulus Gellius' ''Attic Nights''<ref>''[https://pen...")
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Latin Translation Notes
Template:AnchorTemplate:Lang beard grows, head doesn't grow wiser
Template:AnchorTemplate:Lang a beard doesn't make one a philosopher Wise only in appearance. From Aulus Gellius' Attic Nights[1]
Template:AnchorTemplate:Lang wise as far as the beard Wise only in appearance. From Erasmus's collection of Adages.
Template:AnchorTemplate:AnchorTemplate:Lang (BVM) Blessed Virgin Mary A common name in the Roman Catholic Church for Mary, the mother of Jesus. The genitive, Beatae Mariae Virginis (BMV), occurs often as well, appearing with such words as horae (hours), litaniae (litanies) and officium (office).
Template:AnchorTemplate:Lang of blessed memory See in memoriam
Template:AnchorTemplate:Lang blessed in spirit [are] the poor. A Beatitude from Template:Bibleref in the Vulgate: beati pauperes spiritu, quoniam ipsorum est regnum caelorum "Blessed in spirit [are] the poor, for theirs is the kingdom of the heavens".
Template:AnchorTemplate:Lang blessed [are] those who possess Translated from Euripides
Template:AnchorTemplate:Lang blessed are they who walk in the law of the Lord Inscription above the entrance to St. Andrew's Church (New York City), based on the second half of Psalm 119:1
Template:AnchorTemplate:Lang blessed are they whose way is upright first half of Psalm 119:1, base of several musical setting such as Beati quorum via (Stanford)
Template:AnchorTemplate:Lang blessed is the man who finds wisdom From Proverbs 3:13; set to music in a 1577 motet of the same name by Orlando di Lasso.
Template:AnchorTemplate:Lang war, a woman who lures men and takes them by force Latin proverbTemplate:Citation needed
Template:AnchorTemplate:Lang
Protesilaus amet!
let others wage war
Protesilaus should love!
Originally from Ovid, Heroides 13.84,[2] where Laodamia is writing to her husband Protesilaus who is at the Trojan War. She begs him to stay out of danger, but he was in fact the first Greek to die at Troy. Also used of the Habsburg marriages of 1477 and 1496, written as Template:Lang (let others wage war; you, happy Austria, marry). Said by King Matthias.
Template:Lang war hateful to mothers From Horace
Template:Lang I grow old through war and law Motto of the House of d'Udekem d'Acoz
Template:Lang war of all against all A phrase used by Thomas Hobbes to describe the state of nature
Template:Lang war as the Romans did it All-out war without restraint as Romans practiced against groups they considered to be barbarians
Template:Lang war feeds itself
Template:AnchorTemplate:Lang Paupers' Bible Tradition of biblical pictures displaying the essential facts of Christian salvation
Template:AnchorTemplate:Lang I drink, therefore I am A play on "cogito ergo sum", "I think therefore I am"
Template:AnchorTemplate:Lang he gives twice, who gives promptly A gift given without hesitation is as good as two gifts.
Template:AnchorTemplate:Lang (bid) twice in a day Medical shorthand for "twice a day"
Template:AnchorTemplate:Lang in good faith In other words, "well-intentioned", "fairly". In modern contexts, often has connotations of "genuinely" or "sincerely". Bona fides is not the plural (which would be bonis fidebus), but the nominative, and means simply "good faith". Opposite of mala fide.
Template:AnchorTemplate:Lang note-worthy goods In law, if a person dying has goods, or good debts, in another diocese or jurisdiction within that province, besides his goods in the diocese where he dies, amounting to a certain minimum value, he is said to have Template:Lang; in which case, the probat of his will belongs to the archbishop of that province.
Template:AnchorTemplate:Lang good services A nation's offer to mediate in disputes between two other nations
Template:AnchorTemplate:Lang goods of a country A jury or assize of countrymen, or good neighbors
Template:AnchorTemplate:Lang vacant goods United Kingdom legal term for ownerless property that passes to The Crown
Template:AnchorTemplate:Lang it is a good shepherd's [job] to shear his flock, not to flay them Tiberius reportedly said this to his regional commanders, as a warning against taxing the populace excessively.
Template:AnchorTemplate:Lang overcome evil with good Motto of Westonbirt School
Template:AnchorTemplate:Lang common good of the community Or "general welfare". Refers to what benefits a society, as opposed to Template:Lang, which refers to what is good for an individual. In the film Hot Fuzz, this phrase is chanted by an assembled group of people, in which context it is deliberately similar to another phrase that is repeated throughout the film, which is The Greater Good.
Template:AnchorTemplate:Lang common good of a man Refers to an individual's happiness, which is not "common" in that it serves everyone, but in that individuals tend to be able to find happiness in similar things.
Template:Lang the North is our home, the sea is our friend Motto of Orkney
Template:AnchorTemplate:Lang harmless (or inert) thunderbolt Used to indicate either an empty threat, or a judgement at law which has no practical effect
Template:AnchorTemplate:Ill baffling puzzle, thorny problem John of Cornwall (ca. 1170) was once asked by a scribe what the word meant. It turns out that the original text said in diebus illis [in those days], which the scribe misread as in die busillis [at the day of Busillis], believing this was a famous man. This mondegreen has since entered the literature; it occurs in Alessandro Manzoni's novel The Betrothed (1827), in Dostoevsky's The Brothers Karamazov (1880), and in Andrea Camilleri's Inspector Montalbano series.


References

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Additional references

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