Jump to content

List of Latin phrases (O)

From Wiki Knights Errant Life
Revision as of 16:36, 3 June 2025 by WikiKnight (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{Short description|none}} {{Latin intro|O}}<onlyinclude> {| class="wikitable" |- !Latin!!Translation!!Notes |- |''O Deus ego amo te''||O God I Love You||attributed to Saint Francis Xavier |- |''{{visible anchor|O fortunatos nimium sua si bona norint, agricolas}}''||The farmers would count themselves lucky, if only they knew how good they had it||from Virgil in ''Georgics'' II, 458 |- |''{{anchor|o homines ad servitutem paratos}}o homines ad servitutem pa...")
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)

Template:Short description Template:Latin intro

Latin Translation Notes
O Deus ego amo te O God I Love You attributed to Saint Francis Xavier
Template:Visible anchor The farmers would count themselves lucky, if only they knew how good they had it from Virgil in Georgics II, 458
Template:Anchoro homines ad servitutem paratos Men ready to be slaves! attributed (in Tacitus, Annales, III, 65) to the Roman Emperor Tiberius, in disgust at the servile attitude of Roman senators; said of those who should be leaders but instead slavishly follow the lead of others
O tempora, o mores! Oh, the times! Oh, the morals! also translated "What times! What customs!"; from Cicero, Catilina I, 2
O Tite tute Tati tibi tanta tyranne tulisti O tyrant Titus Tatius, what terrible calamities you brought onto yourself! from Quintus Ennius, Annales (104), considered an example of a Latin tongue-twister
Obedientia civium urbis felicitas The obedience of the citizens makes us a happy city Motto of Dublin
Template:Anchorobiit (ob.) one died "He/she died", inscription on gravestones; ob. also sometimes stands for obiter (in passing or incidentally)
Template:Anchorobit anis, abit onus The old woman dies, the burden is lifted Arthur Schopenhauer
Template:Anchorobit caeleps Ob. Cael. or died a bachelor (implying no legitimate offspring ever existed to inherit, cf. d.s.p., d.s.p.s. and d.s.p.m.) Heraldic visitation or County Visitation Books for England
Template:Anchorobiter dictum a thing said in passing in law, an observation by a judge on some point of law not directly relevant to the case before him, and thus neither requiring his decision nor serving as a precedent, but nevertheless of persuasive authority. In general, any comment, remark or observation made in passing
Template:Anchorobliti 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
obscuris vera involvens the truth being enveloped by obscure things from Virgil
Template:Anchorobscurum per obscurius the obscure by means of the more obscure An explanation that is less clear than what it tries to explain; synonymous with ignotum per ignotius
Template:Anchorobtineo et teneo to obtain and to keep motto
Template:Anchorobtorto collo with a twisted neck unwillingly
Template:Anchoroculus dexter (O.D.) right eye Ophthalmologist shorthand
Template:Anchoroculus sinister (O.S.) left eye
Template:Anchoroderint dum metuant let them hate, so long as they fear favorite saying of Caligula, attributed originally to Lucius Accius, Roman tragic poet (170 BC)
Template:Anchorodi et amo I hate and I love opening of Catullus 85; the entire poem reads, "odi et amo quare id faciam fortasse requiris / nescio sed fieri sentio et excrucior" (I hate and I love. Why do I do this, you perhaps ask. / I do not know, but I feel it happening to me and I am burning up.)
Template:Anchorodi profanum vulgus et arceo I hate the unholy rabble and keep them away Horace, Carmina III, 1
odium theologicum theological hatred name for the special hatred generated in theological disputes
Template:Anchoroleum camino (pour) oil on the fire from Erasmus' (1466–1536) collection of annotated Adagia
Template:Anchoromne ignotum pro magnifico every unknown thing [is taken] for great or "everything unknown appears magnificent" The source is Tacitus: Agricola, Book 1, 30 where the sentence ends with 'est'. The quotation is found in Arthur Conan Doyle's Sherlock Holmes short story "The Red-Headed League" (1891) where the 'est' is missing.
Template:Anchoromne initium difficile est every beginning is difficult
Template:Visible anchor every living thing is from an egg foundational concept of modern biology, opposing the theory of spontaneous generation
Template:AnchorOmnes homines sunt asini vel homines et asini sunt asini All men are donkeys or men and donkeys are donkeys a sophisma proposed and solved by Albert of Saxony (philosopher)
Template:Anchoromnes vulnerant, postuma necat, or, omnes feriunt, ultima necat all [the hours] wound, last one kills usual in clocks, reminding the reader of death
Template:Anchoromnia cum deo all with God motto for Mount Lilydale Mercy College, Lilydale, Victoria, Australia
Template:Anchoromnia dicta fortiora si dicta Latina everything said [is] stronger if said in Latin or "everything sounds more impressive when said in Latin"; a more common phrase with the same meaning is quidquid Latine dictum sit altum videtur (whatever said in Latin, seems profound)
Template:Anchoromnia in mensura et numero et pondere disposuisti Thou hast ordered all things in measure, and number, and weight. Book of Wisdom, 11:21
Omnia mea mecum porto All that is mine I carry with me is a quote that Cicero ascribes to Bias of Priene
Template:Anchoromnia mutantur, nihil interit everything changes, nothing perishes Ovid (43 BC – 17 AD), Metamorphoses, book XV, line 165
Template:Anchoromnia omnibus all things to all men 1 Corinthians 9:22
Template:Anchorsi omnia ficta if all (the words of poets) is fiction Ovid, Metamorphoses, book XIII, lines 733–4: "si non omnia vates ficta"
Template:Anchoromnia vincit amor love conquers all Virgil (70 BC – 19 BC), Eclogue X, line 69
omnia munda mundis everything [is] pure to the pure [men] from The New Testament
Template:Anchoromnia praesumuntur legitime facta donec probetur in contrarium all things are presumed to be lawfully done, until it is shown [to be] in the reverse in other words, "innocent until proven guilty"
Template:Anchoromnia sponte fluant absit violentia rebus everything should flow by itself, force should be absent "let it go"
omnia sunt communia all things shall be held in common from Acts of the Apostles
Template:Anchoromnis vir enim sui Every man for himself!
Template:Anchoromnibus idem the same to all motto of Pieter Corneliszoon Hooft, usually accompanied by a sun, which shines for (almost) everyone
Template:Anchoromnibus locis fit caedes There is slaughter everywhere (in every place) Julius Caesar's The Gallic War, 7.67
Template:Anchoromnis traductor traditor every translator is a traitor every translation is a corruption of the original; the reader should take heed of unavoidable imperfections
Template:Anchoromnis vir tigris everyone a tiger motto of the 102nd Intelligence Wing
Template:Anchoromnium gatherum gathering of all miscellaneous collection or assortment; "gatherum" is English, and the term is used often used facetiously
Template:Anchoronus probandi burden of proof
Template:Anchoronus procedendi burden of procedure burden of a party to adduce evidence that a case is an exception to the rule
Template:Anchoropera omnia all works collected works of an author
Template:Anchoropera posthuma posthumous works works published after the author's death
Template:Anchoroperari sequitur esse act of doing something follows the act of being scholastic phrase, used to explain that there is no possible act if there is not being: being is absolutely necessary for any other act
opere citato (op. cit.) in the work that was cited used in academic works when referring again to the last source mentioned or used
Template:Anchoropere et veritate in action and truth doing what you believe is morally right through everyday actions
Template:Anchoropere laudato (op. laud.)   See opere citato
Template:Anchoroperibus anteire leading the way with deeds to speak with actions instead of words
Template:Anchorophidia in herba a snake in the grass any hidden danger or unknown risk
opinio juris sive necessitatis an opinion of law or necessity a belief that an action was undertaken because it was a legal necessity; source of customary law
Template:Anchoropus anglicanum English work fine embroidery, especially used to describe church vestments
Opus Dei The Work of God Catholic organisation
ora et labora pray and work This principle of the Benedictine monasteries reads in full: "Ora et labora (et lege), Deus adest sine mora." "Pray and work (and read), God is there without delay" (or to keep the rhyme: "Work and pray, and God is there without delay")
Template:Anchorora pro nobis pray for us "Sancta Maria, mater Dei, ora pro nobis pecatoribus"; Brazilian name for Pereskia aculeata
Template:Anchororando laborando by praying, by working motto of Rugby School
oratio recta direct speech expressions from Latin grammar
oratio obliqua indirect speech
Template:Visible anchor speech for [one's own] house also abbreviated Template:Lang; speak on one's own behalf; based on a speech by Cicero in legal proceedings in 57 AD to regain his house on the Palatine Hill that was confiscated during his exile[1]
Template:Visible anchor the world does not suffice or the world is not enough from Satires of Juvenal (Book IV/10), referring to Alexander the Great; James Bond's adopted family motto in the novel On Her Majesty's Secret Service; it made a brief appearance in the film adaptation of the same name and was later used as the title of the nineteenth James Bond film, The World Is Not Enough.
Template:Visible anchor one world seen in The Legend of Zorro
Template:Visible anchor out of chaos, comes order one of the oldest mottos of Craft Freemasonry.[2]
Template:Anchor(oremus) pro invicem (Let us pray), one for the other; let us pray for each other Popular salutation for Roman Catholic clergy at the beginning or ending of a letter or note. Usually abbreviated OPI. ("Oremus" used alone is just "let us pray").
Template:Visible anchor newly risen, how brightly you shine Motto of New South Wales

References

Template:Reflist

Additional references

Template:Latin phrases