Botryosporium pulchrum was created in 1840.
Pulchrum
Pulcher (pulchra, pulchrum).
Pulcher (pulchra, pulchrum).
The motto of Chandler Preparatory Academy is 'Verum Pulchrum Bonum'.
The motto of Veritas Preparatory Academy is 'Verum, pulchrum, bonum'.
The motto of Tempe Preparatory Academy is 'Verum, pulchrum, bonum'.
Thomas Aquinas College's motto is 'Verum • Bonum • Pulchrum'.
Trinity School at River Ridge's motto is 'Verum, Bonum, Pulchrum'.
Pulcher, pulchra, pulchrum (depending on the gender of the beautiful thing; a beautiful woman is pulchra).
"Beautiful car" is an English equivalent of "pulchrum vehiculum."The neuter adjective "pulchrum" means "beautiful." The neuter noun "vehiculum" means "vehicle, conveyance." Latin has no equivalent to the English definite article "the." But the neuter numeral adjective/pronoun "unum," which means "one," may serve as a singular indefinite article in its meaning "a."The pronunciation is "pool-kroos veh-EE-koo-loom" in the liturgical Latin of the Church and "puhl-kroom veh-ih-kuh-loom" in the classical Latin of the ancient Romans.
Suum cuique (pulchrum est). That is all that I have found. The suum is the reflexive pronoun referring to the "his own" part. The cuique is the dative of qui, quae, quod (who/that/which, who/that/which, that/which) meaning "to each". The pulchrum est is "(it) is beautiful". Together it means "to each his own is beautiful". This means that someone's own something is beautiful to that someone; whereas it may not be beautiful--even ugly--to another.
"Pulchrum vehiculum" is a Latin equivalent of "beautiful car."The neuter adjective "pulchrum" means "beautiful." The neuter noun "vehiculum" means "vehicle, conveyance." Latin has no equivalent to the English definite article "the." But the neuter numeral adjective/pronoun "unum," which means "one," may serve as a singular indefinite article in its meaning "a."The pronunciation is "pool-kroos veh-EE-koo-loom" in the liturgical Latin of the Church and "puhl-kroom veh-ih-kuh-loom" in the classical Latin of the ancient Romans.