Out of many, one. = make the states into one big unit to regulate commerce.
It is believed to have derived from Hocus-Pocus, a meaningless Latin-sounding phrase used by conjurers.
Not French; Dog-Latin - that is, not real Latin, but a phrase made to look like it. Don't let the bastards grind you down.
"Cover" derives from the Latin word with a similar meaning, "cooperire." The phrase "cover over" is a natural derivative of "cover," as it is a slightly more descriptive form of the verb.
The English meaning of the Latin phrase 'de facto' is 'in' ['de'] 'fact' ['facto']. So the phrase 'de facto capital of the Caliphate' means the city that in fact serves as the capital city. The English meaning of the Latin phrase 'de jure' is 'in' ['de'] 'law' ['jure']. In this example, the city that the law recognizes as the capital isn't the city that actually fills the role.
The phrase "circa 1950" means "some time around 1950." The word "circa" is Latin for "about" or "near".
Latin. The phrase means One from many. E=from, out of. Pluribus=many. Unum=one.
Latin for "out of many, one."
One out of many
The phrase is " E Pluribus Unum ". It is Latin and can be translated as " One From Many ".
The Latin phrase E-Pluribus-Unum is a national motto, Latin for "Out of Many,One."
PHRASE, not "phase"E Pluribus Unum, not "pluribus unum"The words mean "Out of many, one" and appear on ALL American coins.
The Latin phrase E-PLURIBUS-UNUM (Out of Many, One) is the original national motto of the United States.
The Latin phrase "E pluribus unum" is the national motto. It translates to "out of many, one."
E Pluribus Unum is the national motto of the United States. It's a Latin phrase which translates to "out of many, one." If you look at the coins and bills in your pocket, the phrase is on all of them regardless of date.
It's the national motto. It's a Latin phrase meaning "out of many, one."
E pluribus unum is the Latin saying that appears on pennies in the United States of America. The prepositional phrase translates literally as "Out of many, one." The pronunciation will be "ey PLOO-ree-boos OO-noom" in Church and in classical Latin.
''ACCORD'' The Great Seal of the United States contains the Latin motto E Pluribus Unum. The translation of this phrase is "out of many, one." (GO T.F.S.)