non periculo non gloria
What man discusses about a great danger?
"We are in great danger. You should return to the fight."
This looks like an extract from a Latin diploma text. It means "... and the trial having been passed, for the Degree . . ."
The English translation of the Latin question 'Quid vir de magno pericolo agit' is What does a man bring forth out of great danger? or perhaps What is the man doing about the great danger?The word-by-word translation is as follows: 'quid' means 'what'; 'vir' means 'man'; 'de' means 'from, out of, concerning'; 'magno' means 'great'; 'periculo' means 'danger'; and 'agit' means '[he/she/it] does/sets in motion'.
"If the pilot is skilled, we will reach port without danger."Magister is literally "master"; in a nautical context like this the best translation is "pilot" or "steersman."Latin is more fastidious with its future tenses than English; fuerit is literally "will have been."
he was a mean person who lived with mean people in a mean castle on a mean hill in a mean country in a mean continent in a mean world in a mean solar system in a mean galaxy in a mean universe in a mean dimension
you mean what you mean
Mean is the average.
It mean what you don't what does it mean.
Mean
The arithmetic mean is a weighted mean where each observation is given the same weight.