who if healthy?
Usually used in the latin phrase "Qui docet discit" in English means "he who teaches learns."
Quae outermost risit as best one can risit
He who tries, wins.
"Qui Bono" means "Who benifits?" so... it's TOTALLY dissing America (John Adams, too)! "Qui bono" means "Who benefits?"
The correct rendering of "Blessed is he who comes in the Name of the Lord" in Latin reads as follows: Benedictus qui venit in nomine Domini!
The phrase 'mais qui' means But who[m]. In the word-by-word translation, the conjuction 'mais' means 'but'. And the conjunction 'qui' means 'who, who[m]'.
The ancient, classical Latin language didn't require the inclusion of a verb in all situations. One such situation is the inclusion, or exclusion, of the verb 'to be'. The phrase here is such an example. For the English translation of the Latin phrase 'O qui coeli terraeque serenitas' is the following: O what [is the] calm of heaven and earth?
The English translation of the Latin phrase 'Qui audet' is Who dares. In the word-by-word translation, the exclamatory/indefinite/interrogative/relative pronoun 'qui' means 'who'. The verb 'audet' means '[he/she/it] dares'.
Qui ante? in Latin is "Who before?" in English.
"They will go higher who aim at the highest things."
what is the biggest of the carnivores
Hoc est, qui sum