Que bono is the same as cui bono - Who benefits
This is a misspelling of "cui bono?" "cui bono?" means "to whose benefit?", literally, "as a benefit to whom?", a Latin double dative construction. It is a question that is asked when investigating a crime or misdeed. One way to identify a possible culprit is to ask whom the crime or misdeed benefited.
The Latin equivalent of the English question 'What is the benefit?' is the following: Cui bono. The word-by-word translation is as follows: 'cui' means 'to what'; and 'bono' means 'good'. The pronunciation is the following: kwee BOH-noh.
"For What Purpose?" A+
The Latin phrase is Cui bono? Usually it implies that something underhand or secret is going on.
The French word "cui cui" is similar to the English onomatopoeia "tweet tweet," representing the sound that a bird makes.
The boy raked the neighbors leaves for pro bono. The surgery was pro bono. (Pro Bono doesn't just mean lawyers.)
pro bono pacis = for the sake of peace/for the good of peace
bono is not an Italian word. It's close to buono, which means "good".
CUI means Centralised Unpaid Item and normally relates to a cheque if the sender has cancelled the cheque.
very hard to explain ;)
Mai Cui has written: 'Cui Degao xian sheng yi shu'