Saepe create molles aspera spina rosas
Often the prickly thorn produces tender roses
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∙ 12y agoThe English word "often" is translated into Latin as saepe.
It means "often."
He often scratches his head is the English equivalent of 'Saepe caput scabit'. In the word by word translation, the adverb 'saepe' means 'often'. The noun 'caput' means 'head'. The verb 'scabit' means '[he/she/it] does scratch, is scratching, scratches'.
Te saepe meminisse.
In the imperative mood (as a command or instruction):- speaking to one person: bene vive, multum ama, saepe ride- speaking to more than one person: bene vivite, multum amate, saepe rideteIn the subjunctive mood (as a wish; "may you live . . .")- speaking to one person: bene vivas, multum ames, saepe rideas- speaking to more than one person: bene vivatis, multum ametis, saepe rideatisIn the infinitive (as, for example, a motto; "to live . . .")- bene vivere, multum amare, saepe ridere
Saepe amorem dat.
Argo broad often
it means "Live well, laugh often, love much"
Often, the mind wanders now in this with my eyes and I have seen of our battle was raging fiercely on that day by the enemy to be conquered in no way be able to
"Constant practice devoted to one subject often prevails over both intelligence and skill." This was said by the Roman orator Marcus Tullius Cicero in his oration "For Cornelius Balbus" (he used the alternative spelling adsiduus).
Mica, Mica, parva stella; Miror quaenam sis tam bella. Splendens eminus in illo, Alba velut gemma caelo. Quando fervens sol discessit, Nec calore prata pascit, Mox ostendis lumen purum, Micans, micans per obscurum. Tibi, noctu qui vagatur, Ob scintillulam gratatur; Ni mica res, tu non sciret, Quas per vias errans iret. Meum saepe thalamum luce, Specularis curiosa; Neque carpseris soporem, Donec venit sol per auram. Mica, Mica, parva stella; Miror quaenam sis tam bella.
Charles Kenneth Brampton has written: 'Ockham and his alleged authorship of the tract 'Quia saepe iuris'' '[William of Ockham]' 'Scotus, Ockham, and the theory of intuitive cognition' 'History teaching atlas and note book of British and world history from the earliest times to 1960' 'Marsiglio of Padua' 'Gregory of Rimini 'Tradition and innovation in the fourteenth century'' 'The probable order of Ockham's non-polemical works' 'Guillaume d'Ockham fut-il maitre en theologie' 'Wheaton's history teaching atlas and note book of British & world history from the earliest times to 1938' 'Ockham and his authorship of the Summulae in libros physicorum' 'Ralph of Malling, rector of All Saints Church, Ockham, 1294' 'Nominalism and the law of parsimony'