The usual spelling is "Quid ad aeternitatem" and it means "what does this have to do with eternity?". the quotation is usually attributed to St. Aloysius.
This is a quotation from St. Aloysius, I believe. Quid est hoc ad aeternitatem
The Quid was created in 1964.
Quid is a slang term for Pound. One Quid, Two Quid, One Hundred Quid. 12.50 Quid is Twelve Pound and 50 Pence. See link to Universal Currency Converter for a current currency conversion.
A quid is slang for one pound
3.5 quid
A quid is equal to a pound in London......'Quid' is a slang term for a Pound Sterling (GBP) (£).
there are four different things here. amo amas amat: these are the 1st, 2nd and 3rd person singular present indicitive conjugations of the verb amo, amare, amatus sum "I love, you love, he/she/it loves" quid pro quo: "this for that" memento mori: "you must be mindful of the dead" ad infinitum: "to infinity"
Quid is British slang for one pound.
Not who, but what
Quid - encyclopedia - ended in 2007.
Cave Quid Optes Cave = Careful Quid = What Optes = What you wish for (you wish)
Quid agis? (singular) Quid agitis? (plural)