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Concordia res parvae crescunt, discordia maximae dilabuntur. Time obliterates remembrance of crimes. Conditio sine qua non. I range my knowledge under distinct heads, that I may know where to apply for it, when wanted. Confiteor, si quid prodest delicta fateri. The term "congd d'dlire" [French] is used in reference to the election of a bishop or a dean: Conocidos muchos, amigos pocos. There are some species of calumny too dangerous to be overlooked. Grey, supplies some interesting information respecting the Conseils de Prud'hommes: A "' Conseil de Prud'lhommqes" is a mixed council of master tradesmen and workmen, for the decision of disputes between persons of both these denominations, for the decision of disputes between master and man.
After the peace of , councils of this description were established by law at several towns in Rhenish Prussia, where they are now called " Triblccaux d'Inducstrie," that is to say, Courts of Trade, Business, or Arts and Manufactures. Consuetudo manerii et loci est observanda.
Consuetudinem benignitatis largitioni munerurl longe antepono. The former is peculiar to great and distinguished persons; the latter belongs to, is the peculiar characteristic of, flatterers of the people, who court the applause of the inconstant vulgar. Conter fleurettes, conter des fleurettes. This quotation is generally used in legal discussions. If the act be not against law, it is an invasion upon morality. Contra potentes nemo est munitus satis; Si vero accessit consiliator maleficus, Vis et nequitia quidquid oppugnant, ruit.
It is sometimes used to draw forth and to examine the weight of a man's opinions or arguments. Foreign sounds, like foreign servants, ought not to be introduced to the disadvantage of the natives, until these are found unworthy of trust. I was once asked at a party what was the difference between a conversation and a conversazione; I replied, that if there were any difference, I considered it must be this: In a conversation, if a blockhead talked nonsense you were not obliged to listen to him; but in a conversazione you were.
In country places we may often hear the coroner spoken of as the crowner. There are, or were, in the city of. LQndon, certain officials, called aleconners, whose duty it was to visit the public-houses, and see what kind of malt-liquor the licensed victualers supipled the public with. It is sometimes used, in a broader sense,' to describe those men who are best acquainted with the diplomatic forms. Omnia orta occidunt, et orta senescunt. The coipus delicti in many cases, as in that of a forged promissory note, is specially stated upon the record.
A dull and inanimate being. Corruptissima republica, plurimae leges. The statue may then be said to have gotten a head, and nothing is wanted but the finishing touches. The expression "cottage orad" is nearly always incorrectly written: Coudre le peau de regnard a celle du lion. A "coup de'tat" is an extraordinary and violent measure taken by a government, when the safety of the state is in danger, or is supposed to be so. This court-baron is of two natures: Court-leet —"Is a court of record, held once in the year, and not oftener, within a particular hundred, lordship, or manor, before the steward of the leet.
Coke, because justice is there administered as speedily as dust falls from the foot; upon the same principle that justice among the Jews was administered in porta civitatis; that the proceedings might be more speedy as well as public. The etymology of a learned modern writer is, however, much more clear and evident vide Barrington's Observations on the Stat.
It is a court of record incident to every fair and market, of which the steward of him who owns or has the toll of the market presides as judge. It was instituted to administer justice for all commercial injuries done in that very fair or market, and not in any preceding one: The phrase "coftte que cofte" is nearly always incorrectly written by Eaglish persons: See "Genus irritabile vatum.
The full expression is, Credat Judaeus Apella, non ego: The expression is a contemptuous one, meaning that the thing was too absurd and improbable to obtain credence from a man of sense, but might possibly impose on the understanding of the superstitious Jew. The Jews were in those days treated pretty much as they are in our day, and were despised as the offscourings of the human race: Because a little-odd-Old Alan, Stripped to his shirt, had come to lead the van!
Crede quod habes, et habes. Credebant hoc grande nefas, et morte piandum, Si juvenis vetulo non assurrexerat, et si Barbato cuicunque puer, licet ipse videret Plura domi fraga, et majores glandis acervos. Credo pudicitiam, Saturno rege, moratam In terres. Credula res amor est. Cresce di, cresce'1 froddo, dice il pescatore. Crescit sub pondere virtus. Creta, an carbone notandi? Creverunt et opes et opum furlosa cupido, Ut, quo possideant plurima, plura petant.
Sic quibus intumuit suffusa venter ab unda, Quo plus sunt potae, plus sitiuntur aquae. In the same manner is it with those who suffer from dropsy-the more they drink, the more thirsty they are. Crimina qui cernunt aliorum, non sua cernunt, Hi sapiunt allis, desipiuntque sibi. Such men are wise for others, but fools to themselves.
With all these tokens of a knave complete, Shouldst thou be honest, thou'rt a roguish cheat. The true meaning of "crisis" isj ylllnenlt. This Anglicized Greek word retains its Greek plural, criteria. Crudelis ubique luctus, ubique pavor, et plurima mortis imago. Most text-books say it means "For what good? We have no single term in our language capable of expressing the full force of gratia, as here employed. It is used, in the present instance, in what grammarians termn both a passive and an active sense, denoting as well the favor of the powerful towards TIBULLUS, as that peculiar deportment on his own part by which he had conciliated the esteem and confidence of others.
Cui in manu sit quem esse dementem velit, quem sapere, quem sanari, quem in morbum injici, quem contra amari, queim arcessi, quem expeti. Cui non conveniet sua res, ut calceus olim, Si pede major erit, subvertet; si minor, uret. We're pinched in strait, and stumble in the wide. Cui semper dederis, ubi negas, rapere imperas. Cuida0 nab he saber.
Cuilibet in arte sua credendum est. Cujus est dare, ejus est disponere. Cujus tu fidem in pecunia perspexeris, Verere ei verba credere? Cujuslibet rei simulator atque dissimulator. Cul for culpable, which the clerk of arraigns declares the prisoner to be, and prit [corrupted from the French word pret] for ready to prove him so. Cum corpore mentem Crescere sentimus pariterque senescere.
Cum faciem videas, videtur esse quantivis preti. Cum magnis virtutibus affers grande supercilium. Often quoted in an abridged form: Cunr talls sis, utinam noster esses! It is now generally applied to illustrate the advantages arising fiom caution, sagacity, and justifiable delay. Cupias non placuisse nimis. Cupido domilllandi cunctis affectibus flagi antior est. Cur ante tubum tremor occupat artus? Cur moriatur homo cui salvia crescit in horto? Curatio funeris, conditio sepulturae, pompae exsequiarum, magis aunt vivorum solatia, quam subsidia mortuorum.
The word "curd" never means a curate. The French for "curate" is "vicaire," a word derived fiom the Latin word "vicarius," which means, one who perforoms or discharges the office of another, a deputy, a substitute. Aware that those severe laws would cause discontent among his subjects, he began to fear that they would meet together at night in secret and concert measures against him.
To prevent this, he made a law, that all persons should put out their fires and candles at eight o'clock every evening; and, that no one might excuse himself for having a light after the hour prescribed. The term couvrefeu was, by degrees, pronounced curfew: A heavy sound unto hall and bower In England's olden time! Curtae nescio quid semper abest rei. D'un d6vot souvent au chretien v6ritable La distance est deux fois plus longue, A mon avis, Que da p6le antarctique au d6troit de Davis. D'une fille deux gendres. D'une pierre faire deux coups.
Da, Pater, augustam menti conscendere sedem: Da fontem lustrare boni: Give me, unveiled, the source of good to see! Give me thy light, and fix mine eyes on THEE! These are called les dames queteuses. They go about seeking rel;ef for what each calls mes pauvres: Damnos quid non imminuit dies? Damnum appellandum est cum mala farma lucrum. Dans lart d'interesser consiste lart d'ecrire Fr. Men of inferior minds may amuse by florid descriptions; these, however, " Play.
Dans un pays libre on crie beaucoup quoiqu'on souffre peu; dans un pays de tyrannie on se plaint peu quoiqu'on souffre beaucoup. Dare in guardia la lattuga ai paperi. Dare pondus idonea fumo. Dat veniam corvis, vexat censura columbas. The censorious too often fasten on the innocent, whilst, in their misplaced malice, the guilty are suffered to escape; they "Clip the dove's wings, but give the vulture course. The word is also used in its Latin singular number. The phrase is therefore sometimes applied to fallen greatness.
De bon commencement bonne fin. The true meaning must depend on the whole words; on the limits, which the context may put on any single text. De court plaisir long repentir. De die in diem. There must be strong and full proof of malversation. De fol juge brave sentence. De fructu arborem cognosco. De fume in flammam. De gustibus non est disputandum. De hoc multi multa, omnis aliquid, nemo satis.
In the former case he is guilty defacto; in the latter dejurfie. De l'audace, encore de l'audace, toujours de l'audace. De la main a la bouche se perd souvent la soupe. De mal en pis. Compare "De male crtaesitis vix gaudlet tertius heres: De minimis non curat lex. De non apparentibus et de non existentibus eadema est ratio. De paupertate tacentes plus poscente ferent. Gets more than he who makes a loh. De quo libelli in celeberrimis locis proponuntur, huic ne perire quidem tacite conceditur. De son tort de mesme.
It may, however, be applied to a parasite, toad-eater, lick-spittle: Your lackey, but without the shoulder-knot. This maxim could not be too strongly impressed, if we did not conceive it to be a mere fiction of the poet: Decet affectus animi neque se nimium erigere, nec subjacere serviliter. Decipit exemplar vitiis imitabile. Decipit Frons prima multos: Our understandings seldom reach to that which has been carefully reposed in the inmost recesses of the mind. The manners and conversation of men of the world are artificial.
It is only by some severe ordeal,, by long experience, that their natural propensities are to be discovered. Decolor, obscurus, vilis, non ille repexam Caesariem regum, nec candida virginis ornat Colla, nec insigni splendet per cingula morsu; Sed nova si nigri videas miracula saxi, Tune superat pulcros cultus, et quicquid l3ois, Indus litoribus rubra scrutatur in alga. But search the wonders of the dusky stone, And own all glories of the mine outdone, Each grace of form, each ornament of state, That decks the fair, or dignifies the great. Dedecus ille domus sciet ultimus. The words are used also to denote the commission of a justice of the peace, which begins in the same manner.
Dediscit animus sero qulod didicit diu. From the Saxon "demnan," or the Dutch "doemen," to judge. Deer de nuwt wol yte mot ze krecke. Ecartez ce flcheux, qui vers vous s'achemine, Rien ne doit d6ranger 1'honnete homme qui dine. In that blest hour, your bore's the veriest sinner! Naught must disturb a man of worth at dinner. Aetva Trep t caI7fg. It is a nondescript kind of expression, and, according to the time at which it is taken, may be considered either breakfast, lunch, or dinner, only under another name.
Del dicho al hecho ay gran trecho. It has often been used as a sort of war-whoop, to urge a "war of extermination. Deliberat Roma, perit Saguntum. Deliberare utilia mora utilissima est. The unhappy, unfortunate people always suffer for the faults of their leaders. The following poetical paraphrase will render the quotation still more intelligible:. The literal meaning of " delirium, tremens" is trenbling or shaking unsoundness of mind. On this disease of the brain, Dr. Roots very judiciously makes the following interesting remarks: The' deliriumn' itself cannot tremble.
Other persons have vari6usly christened it. BLAKE called it the'brain fever of drunkards. Still, if we distinctly understand by the term'delirium tremeJns' of what the disease really consists, there is no objection to that designation rem aining. Demanda al osto s'egl'ha buon vino. Go hence, and whine among the school-girl race. Your bonnet to its right use: I thank your lordship,'tis very hot. No, believe me,'tis very cold; the wind is northerly. It is indifferent cold, my lord, indeed. But yet, methinks, it is very sultry and hot for my complexion.
Exceedingly, my lord; it is very sultry as it were; I can't tell how. Desiderantem quod satis est, neque Tumultuosum sollicitat mare, Nec saevus Arcturi cadentis Impetus, aut orientis Haedi. His repose is neither disturbed by shipwrecks, nor by losses in agricultural pursuits.
Desinit in piscem imulier formosa superne. The idea is taken from the mermaid. The application is to literary works which give the fairest opening promise, but terminate in defect and deformity. Despues de ydo el conejo, tomanos el consejo. Desunt inopiae multa, avaritiae omnia. The singuelar is "dgtenu. Detur aliquando otium quiesque fessis. On principles of public policy, no money ought to influence the appointment to such offices.
Let the prize be given to the most deserving. Deum qui non summum putet, Aut stultum, aunt rerum esse imperitum existina. Cui in manu sit quem esse dementera velit, Quem sapere; quem sanari, quem in morbum iljlci; Quem contra amari, quemn arcessi, quem expeti. As in his hand the power almighty lies Who shall on earth be senseless or be wise, Who shall be heal'd, and who by sickness proved, Who amongst men regarded or beloved. The full and correct form is Quod Deus avertat! An exclamation frequently used when any calamity is apprehended.
Deus undecunque juvat modo propitius. Deux chiens ne s'accordent point a un os. Two proud fellows seldom agree, draw well together. Deux yeux volent plus clair qu'un. Di badessa tornar conversa. Di bene fecerunt inopis me quodque pusilli Finxerunt animi, raro et perpauca loquentis.
No wit, nor yet to prattling much inclined. Di buona terra tb la vigna, di buon madre tb la figlia. Di un dono far duoi amici. Dia de dos cruces. Until we try to take in the particulars one after another, we do not discover how much is coInprised in the universal. Else can your coinfurt be but small, Good hap scarce have beginning: For vice is hurtful unto man; In virtue lies his surest plan. Dies adimit aegritudinem hominibus. Dies, nisi falor, adest, quem semper acerbum, Semper honoratum [sic Di voluistis] habebo.
Such days are, all Sundays in the year; the Purification, in Hilary term; the Ascension, in Easter term; the festival of St. The day fixed for a particular business. The word "diet," in this sense, seems to be a term peculiar to Scots law, being in no English dictionary; though the same notion is there assigned as one of the supposed origins of the name "diet," as applied to a convention of princes. Dieu d6fend le droit. Dieu et mon droit. Difficile est longum subito deponere- amorem. Difficile est plurimum virtutem revereri, qui semper secunda fortuna sit usus. Difficilem oportet aurem habere ad crimina.
Difficili bile tumet jecur. Dignum laude virum Musa vetat mori. Dii laboribus omnia vendunt. Dii majores et minores. Small images, which they worshiped at home. It is now sometimes used. They were such a man's dii penates; they were the persons whom he caressed, entertained, and almost worshiped. Dilationes in lege sunt odiosae. It can now go merely to intimate that a dilatory plea cannot be received, unless the matter be supported by an affidavit.
But when she thunders from an angry sky, Our friends, our flatterers, and our lovers fly. Diners A la carte. The French use the phrases "conterflezretles, conter desfietrettes," in the same sense as " dire desftelettes. Ati r'atLde ol yepovreC. Dis proxirnus ille est, Quem ratio, non ira movet: Disce, docendus adhuc quae censet amiculus, ut si Caecus iter monstrare velit: Though blind your guide, some precepts yet unknown He may disclose, which you may make your own.
Dlscenti assidue multa senecta venit. Nam studio tali tibi proficis atque sodali. Also a raised ground in a hall, or any other room in a house. It is likewise applied to a range of cushioned seats round a room. Dives agris, dives positis in foenore nummis. Dives q'ui fieri vult, et cito vult fieri.
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By dividing a nation into parties, and poising them against each other, the people are deprived of their intrinsic weight, and their rulers incline the scale as suits their caprice or discretion. Divieni tosto vecchio, se vuoi vivere lungamnente vecchio. Would you increase the craft of womankind, Teach them new wiles and arts? Dociles imitandis turpibus ac pravis omnes sumu. Doctrina sed vim promovet insitam, lRectique cultus pectora roborant: Utcunque defecere mores, Indecorant bene nata culpae. When morals fail, the stains of vice disgrace The fairest honors of the noblest race.
A politician of moderate, fixed, monarchical, and yet co: Before the first Revolution in France, the Doe: Royer Collard was educated ill a college of'Doctrinaires;' his brother was the'Oratorien;' and his uncle was at the head of a community of Doctrinaires at Arras. Royer Collard was denominated a'Doctrinaire' in the Chamber of Deputies, not, however, because he had been educated in a Doctrinaire college, but because, at the French tribune, his manner, logic, eloquence, were always severe, grave, and took that dogmatic form, that logical and rigorous deduction, which clearly announced a body of doctrines fully decided on and adopted.
Royer Collard and his friends accepted, however, this term of reproach, accusing, in their turn, the ultra-Romanist portion of the monarchical party of marching blindly under the inspiration of their momentary passions and interests, without principles and without doctrines which could possibly secure the repose of the country, and the stability of the throne. We had imagined that doctrinaire must answer to theorist; and there we were in the right, but even by that just conclusion were we misled, inasmuch as a French theorist is altofether different from an English theorist.
We Britons are accustomed to call him a theorist who logically carries out his principles or opinions, unalloyed, to their impracticable extremes. Now, in France, such extremes are held to be what is most natural and simple; hence, in politics, despotism and republicanism are thought plain, natural opinions, whilst the theorist, the doctrinaire, is the philosophical politician, who endeavors to steer betwixt those extremes,. Should we then tranelate a doctrinaire a practical man? The expression is, however, often used to signify "a perfect master of both languages, Greek and Latin.
I am consequently of opinion that you would do well in carrying out, in following, the same plan, that you may be thoroughly up to the mark in both tongues, languages. Dolus, an virtus, quis in hoste requirat? The only question is, which is most likely to insure success? At first they were applied only to princes and nobles; at the present day they are only a form of politeness. A prayer in the breviary [prayer-book] of the Church of Rome, and also with "Queen" instead of "-Emperor" in the prayer-book of the Churich of England.
Dominium a possessione coepisse dicitur.
But if there be proof of record established, it outweighs the memory of man, which, by the statute 32 lien. Donna bruta e mal di stomaco, donna bella mral di teste. Dormit aliquando jus, moritur nunquam. If a man releases his right, it is extinguished for the time; but this is to be understood only of the right of the person making the release. Dos est magna parentium virtus.
No inheritance can be more valuable than that of a fair fame transmitted fronm our ancestors. Dos suerios ay, el blando estA compuesto De plumas de aves; y el cruel vestido De plomo, con que oprime, quando viene, El pecho congojado que le tiene. Douces, or, belles paroles n'6corchent pas la langue. Douces promesses obligent les fols. Dove l'oro parla, ogni lingua tace. An interpreter of languages at the Court of the Sultan, and throughout Turkey.
Several of them are attached to each European embassy. To be on both sides. Active, I follow on: Dulee est desipere in loco, is a maxim which requires no illustration. The bravest men have had their fears, and the wisest their follies: Sound philosophy, however, will confine its application to the single case of our country's being attacked.
It is certainly honorable to die in repelling such an aggression. Dulci animos novitate tenebo. When tried, how dreadful the dependence! Dum in dubio est animus, paulo momento hue illuc impellitur. This was used emphatically by Cicero, on reading Plato's arguments on the immortality of the soul. Dum loquimur, fugerit invida aetas. Dum relego, scripsisse pudet. Dum te causidicum, dum te modo rhetora fingi Et non decernis, Taure, quid esse velis, Peleos et Priami transit vel Nestoris aetas, Et serum fuerat jam tibi desinereEja, age, rumpe moras, quo te spectabimus usque?
Dum quid sis dubitas, jam potes esse nihil. Come then, how long such wavering shall we see? Dum vires annique sinunt tolerate laborern: Jam veniet tacito curva senecta pede. Duo cum faciunt idem, non est idem. Duos parietes de eadem fidelia dealbare. To do two things at once. He has, according to the English proverb, "too many irons in the fire. Garlic and wild-thyme pounded together were used by the Roman farmers to recruit the ex hausted spirits of the reapers, and those who had labored in the heat.
In the original passage, the poet expresses his surprise at their being able to endure such food. They are now held, more properly, quamdiu se belne gesserinzt: Durante, et vosmet rebus servate secundis. Live, and reserve yourselves for better fate. Similar to the above sentiment is that of Seneca [a distinguished writer on philosophy]: Optimum est pati quod emendare non possis, that is to say, It is the best thing you can do to bear patiently what you cannot amend, correct, or make better [what cannot be cured must be endured].
Publius Syrus [a Syrian mimographer, writer of plays or farces] alse tells us that JIViseriarum portns est patientia, that is to say, Patience is the asylum [place of refuge] of affliction. E bien asi como los marineros se guian en la noche oscura por el aguja, que les 6s medianera entre la piedra 6 la estrella, 6 les muestra por d5o vayan, tambien en los malos tiempos, como en los buenos, otro si los que han de anconsejar al Rey deben siempre guiar por la justicia.
Thus, nothing is more common than to find it repeated from book to book, that gunpowder and the mariner's compass were first brought from China by this early traveler, though there can be very little doubt that both were known in Europe some time before his return. Indeed, there is good evidence that the use of the magnetic needle was familiar here long before he set out on his travels; for ALONZO EL SABIO, King of Castile, who, about the year , promulgated the famous code of laws known by the title of' Las siete Partidas,' has [in the prearmble of ley 28, titulo 9, partida 2] the following remarkable passage: E meglio esser capo di cardella che coda di storione, Ital.
Egestas cupida rerum novarum. Egli mr'ha dato un osso da rodere. Ego de caseo loquor, tu de creta respondes. Ego ero post principia. Ego nec studium sine divite vena, Nec rude, quid possit, video ingenium: Are useless both; but when in fiiendship joined, A mutual succor in each other find. Or genius how have cultivation Without due pains and application? And, without learning, genius sinks again: Their force united crowns the sprightly reign.
Ego, si risi, quod ineptus Pastillos Rufillus olet, Gorgonius hircum, Lividus et mordax videor tibi? Ego spem pretio non emo. For when once you have introduced these into your house, wish for what you will, and you will quickly obtain it: Egregli mortalis altique silentl. Inoi will your piety bring any delay to wrinkles, to approaching, rapidly advancing, old age, or unconquerable death: Etg ro -rvp eVc rov Ksarvoy. Ejiciunda haec mollities animi. El consejo de la muger es poco, y el, que no le toma, es loco.
Dorado fictions of Raleigh. They indulged in their El Dorado anticipations.
No longer foster, no longer friend. El vino no trae bragas, ni de pafio, ni de lefio.
It is variously said to be a cross or direction-post for the guidance of others; or a sort of torture, by which truth has been elicited by force. Aut Caesar, aut nullus. In colloquial phrase, he may'snap his fingers' at all pecuniary demands, except those incurred within his prison-walls, and for the rest of his life sit with his arms crossed. Ce monde est plein de fous, et qui n'en veut pas voir, Doit se renfermer seul, et casser son miroir. Exigence" is very often onrcorrectly written exigeance. Ab equinis pedibus procul recede. It means a letter, an epistle, a missive, whether the same be short or long.
El vine, que es bueno, no ha menester pregonero. E1le n'a que le bec. B, "Emeriti," the plural of the above word, was the name given to those Roman soldiers who had served out their tilhe, and had exemption fiom military service. At the end of their period of service they received a bounty or reward [emerittnm], either in lands or money, or in both.
Emitur sola virtute potestas. The rule, however, so fair as "learning" is concerned, admits of exceptions innumerable, as we may daily and hourly see. Wisely improve the present: Amazon Music Stream millions of songs. Amazon Advertising Find, attract, and engage customers.
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