Want this question answered?
The best way to interpret this as a grammatical Latin sentence is as "A new action does not follow because of an intervening gap", although if this is intended meaning, the word order is awfully peculiar.The preposition propter requires an object in the accusative, and the only candidate here is spatium, "a gap, space, interval". Novus actus is nominative and must be the subject. Interveniens could go with either actus or spatium, but the latter makes more sense. It is unusual for the subject of the sentence to come between a preposition and its object.
Post hoc ergo propter hoc.
This phrase means: "because of your great glory"
This looks like it really wants to be post hoc ergo propter hoc ("after this, therefore because of this"), but no matter how hard I try I can't get "ergo propter" out of "rge ptporca".
Tactical Imagery-Intelligence Wing's motto is 'Oculi Propter Ungues'.
It means we thank you Lord for your great glory.
The motto of Sierra Canyon School is 'Excellentia propter se, Excellence is its own reward'.
There are 8 fallacies:Dicto simpliciterHasty GeneralizationPost Hoc (Ergo Propter Hoc)Contradictory PremisesAd MisericordiamFalse AnalogyPoisoning the wellHypothesis contrary to fact
Prope means "near" in Latin. It can be used as a preposition (prope domum meam, "near my house") or as an adverb (biennium prope, "nearly two years").
Cur? Why?Other words/phrases:Vah! Ugh!Luke, sum tibi pater. Luke, I am your father. (Literally, Lukus, I am your father.)Amo te. I love you.Quo modo? How?
The word 'thus' may mean 'to this degree' or 'in this way', both of which translate as sic. Or it may mean 'because of', which translates as propter. Or it even may mean 'as an example', which translates as exempli gratia.
'Propter' is the most common, but there are many other ways of getting across the same idea. For example, quoniam (since) or causa (as ablative preceded by a genitive) both indicate a type of causality.