A | B |
Nolens volens | willing or not |
Rem tuam custōdī | Guard your possessions |
E vestigio | From where one stands |
Intempesta nox | The dead of night |
Ora et labora | Pray and work |
Satis iam eventuum | "He had now had enough of success, enough of disaster.” (Win some, lose some) |
Magis illa iuvant, quae pluris emuntur | Those things please more that cost us more. |
Date et dabitur vobis | Ask, and it shall be given you. |
Auribus teneo lupum | I hold the wolf by the ears. |
Veni, vidi, vici | I came, I saw, I conquered |
Aut dic aut accipe calcem. | Either speak or receive a kick. |
Ad sum, qui feci | Here I am, who have done this. |
Suus cuique mos | To each his own way |
Ne difficilia optemus | Let us not wish for difficult things (Cicero) |
Fortiter, fideliter, feliciter | boldly, faithfully, happily |
Non nobis nascimur | We are not born for ourselves alone |
Nec laudas nisi mortuos poetas | Only dead poets are praised |
O tempora! O mores! | Oh, the times! Oh, the customs! |
Optimum quidque rarissimum est | The better a thing is, the rarer it is. |
Nihil est magna somnianti | Nothing is great to the dreamer |