It's an ablative absolute construction. Literally 'with the words having been heard,' although you could translate it 'after the words were heard.'
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Gesta verbis praeveniant! in Latin is "May actions surpass words!" in English.
Audis (speaking to one person) or auditis(speaking to more than one)
Singular Plural audio audimus audis auditis audit audunt
Cede Nullis means, "Yield to none".
Southwood Boys' Grammar School's motto is 'Factis Non Verbis'.
"Factus non verbis" is a Latin phrase that means "deeds, not words." It emphasizes the importance of actions over words and the idea that actions speak louder than words. It suggests that one's actions should align with their words to show true intentions and credibility.
"Magna est veritas." In English it means "Great is the truth."
"Ut nihil non usdem verbis redderetur auditum." "Everything that (he) had heard (he) could repeat it with the same words." the proper translation of the Latin expression used by Borges is a double negative giving the meaning of the expression a positive sense.
This is a compound sentence with two verbs. The verb in the first independent clause is 'suffered.' The verb in the second independent clause is 'is causing.'
Webber Independent School's motto is 'Achieving Excellence Together'.
"By words" and "to (the) words" are two English equivalents of the Latin word verbīs. Context makes clear whether the ablative case as object of the preposition (case 1) or the dative case as indirect object (example 2) suits. The pronunciation will be "wer-BEES" in Church and classical Latin.
A noun is a word that represents a person, place, thing, or idea, while a verb is a word that expresses action, occurrence, or a state of being. In a sentence, the noun typically performs the action described by the verb. For example, in the sentence "The dog barks," "dog" is the noun and "barks" is the verb.