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Languages, Literatures and Cultures
Latin.

Classics Club

Williams 114
Dates: TBA

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Latin Proverbs:

* Age quod agis

Translation: "Do what you do", in the sense of "Do well what you do", "Do well in whatever you do" or "Be serious in what you do"

* Amor vincit omnia

Translation: "Love conquers all". Often quoted in this form, but originally Omnia vincit amor (same translation) ((Virgil, Eclogues 10:69).

* Bellum se ipsum alet

Translation: "Let war pay for itself"

* Bona fide

Translation: "In good faith."

* Carpe diem

Translation: "Seize the day." By Horace, Odes I,11,8, to Leuconoe: carpe diem, quam minimum credula postero ("take hold of the day, believing as little as possible in the next"). The verb "carpere" has the literal meaning "to pick, pluck," particularly in reference to the picking of fruits and flowers, and was used figuratively by the Roman poets to mean "to enjoy, use, make use of."

 

Latin Proverbs:


* Claude os, aperi oculos!

Translation: "Shut your mouth, open your eyes."

* Pacem in Terris

Translation: "Peace on Earth"

* Scio me nihil scire

Translation: "I know that I know nothing" (Socrates)

* Veni Vidi vici

Translation: "I came, I saw, I Conquered" Said by Gaius Julius Ceasar refering to his campaign in Pontus.