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If you think you're reading "Dommina Inustio Illumea" you're reading the Oxford University coat of arms, which shows an open book, from left to right. Read it first the left-hand page then the right: "Dominus Illuminatio Mea," the Lord is my light.

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Benjamin Griffin

Lvl 2
4y ago
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Anonymous

Lvl 1
3y ago
Thanks. I read it wrong as if i've never been to books.
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Benjamin Griffin

Lvl 2
4y ago

If you think you're reading "Domminus Inustio Illumea" you're reading the Oxford University Press logo, which shows an open book, from left to right. It should be read first one page then the other: "Dominus Illuminatio Mea," the Lord is my light.

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Wiki User

15y ago

The phrase 'nustio illumea' is incomplete. The complete Latin phrase is the following: 'Dominus illuminatio mea'. It's the motto of Oxford University, in England. The phrase and therefore the motto come from the opening line of Psalm 27, and means The Lord is my light. The word-by-word translation is as follows: 'Dominus' means 'Lord'; 'illuminatio' means 'light'; and 'mea' means 'my'.

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Benjamin Griffin

Lvl 2
4y ago

If you think you're seeing "Dommina nustio illumea," you're reading the Oxford University Press logo wrong. It shows an open book. Read the left-hand page, then the right: "Dominus illuminatio mea," the Lord is my light.

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Wiki User

15y ago

'Dommina' means 'acts of mastering', but 'nustio' and 'illumea' are not Latin words.

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Q: What does dommina nustio illumea mean?
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