Nothing foreign is the English equivalent of 'nihil alienum'. In the word by word translation, the neuter gender noun 'nihil' means 'nothing'. The neuter gender adjective 'alienum' means 'foreign, strange'.
Universidade Lusófona's motto is 'Humani nihil alienum'.
Coláiste Éamann Rís's motto is 'Nihil Alienum'.
Australian Academy of the Humanities's motto is 'Humani Nihil Alienum'.
Nihil = 'Nothing' as a noun; 'not at all' as an abverb
Some English words that are derivatives of "nihil" include "annihilate" (meaning to destroy completely), "nihilism" (a philosophical belief rejecting established institutions and morality), and "nihilist" (a person who believes in nihilism).
It means "[there is] nothing without work"
The correct changing that you want would be:" Homo sum; humani a me totum alienum puto. " = I am a human being; everything human is strange to me.(TOTUM HUMANUM ALIENUM A ME PUTO would also be correct, but in formal Latin that other order is more classical = HUMANI A ME TOTUM... < direct object TOTUM put after indirect object A ME and also this being put after that genitive/possessive HUMANI = [TOTUM] " OF what is human " > humani a me totum..., and the characteristic given to the direct object, ALIENUM, thus neutral too, as not a verbal complemente in fact but connected to it, referring to the direct object, put by the end of the sentence, just before but close to the verb, PUTO = I judge / consider). In a direct order it would be " Sum homo; puto totum humani alienum a me = I am a human being; I consider everything [that is] of human (species?) [as] strange to me!!!TOTUM is opposite to NIHIL, both neutral forms (from TOTUS, masculine, TOTA, feminine = every, all; NIHIL [also: NIL, or NIHILUM, far less used], just neutral = nothing).I dare to stress that "omnis" would fit better. Remember "Gallia est omnis divisa in partes tres"? Omnis, because it was not a unity but a variety.I have one more variant of this proverb :I am a human and nothing human is alien to me.
Nothing is too difficult for the brave.
Annihilate, nihilism, nil
Nihil agis, nihil moliris, nihil cogitas. The anaphora is in the successive repetition of 'nihil.'
Use what is yours in a way that you don't harm what is another's is the English equivalent of Sic utere tuo ut alienum non laedas.Specifically, the adverb sic means 'in this way, so, thus'. The verb utere is the imperative of utor and means "make use of, use". The singular possessive pronoun tuo means "your, yours". The adverb ut means "as, as being, how". The adjective alienum means "that which belongs to someone else". The adverb non means "not". The verb laedas is the second person singular in the present subjunctive of laedere and means "you damage, you hurt".
Infinitum Nihil was created in 2004.