Said by St Augustine. Means "Martyrdom is made not by the suffering but by the cause" i.e. you do not become a martyr just because you've suffered, but rather because you've suffered for the true faith. By implication suffering a painful death for heresy is not martyrdom.
calculation does not make the monk
Quod non necat fortior facit.
The Latin phrase "natura non facit saltum" means "nature does not make leaps." This suggests that nature typically follows a gradual process rather than sudden jumps or changes.
Sir Edward Coke
Yes, the principle of "natura non facit saltus" (nature does not make jumps) does apply in the context of evolutionary biology. This principle suggests that evolution occurs gradually through small, incremental changes over time, rather than sudden and drastic leaps.
Ex turpi causa non oritur action
The direct Latin translation is desiderium or requisitum. There's also the phrase sine qua non for an indispensible condition. This is short for causa sine qua non, literally "a cause without which not," which was common in medieval philosophy.
An act performed while not in full possession of one's mental faculties doesn't create guilt unless the mind is guilty is the English equivalent of 'Non compos mentis actus non facit ream nisi mens sit rea'. Man is a wolf to man is the English equivalent of 'Homo homini lupus'.In the word by word translation, the adverb 'non' means 'not'. The adjective 'compos' means 'having possession of, in full control of'. The feminine gender noun 'mentis', in the genitive singular of the nominative singular 'mens' as the object of possession, means 'mental faculty, mind'. The masculine gender noun 'actus', in the nominative singular, means 'action, movement'. The verb 'facit', in the third person singular of the present indicative of the infinitive 'facere', means '[he/she/it] does, forms, makes'. The feminine gender noun 'ream', in the accusative singular of the nominative singular 'rea' as the direct object of the verb, means 'accused, guilty'. The conjunction 'nisi' means 'if not, unless'. The verb 'sit', in the third person singular of the present subjunctive of the infinitive 'esse', means 'if it is'.The masculine gender noun 'homo', in the nominative singular, means 'human being'. Its form 'homini', in the dative singular, means 'to the human being'. The masculine gender noun 'lupus', in the nominative singular, means 'wolf'.
Superstition is called andhavishwasam. false belief which is baseless or belief system based on some wrong notions developed by people also leads spreading andhavishwasm. In logic they call it as non-causa pro-causa. Accidental cause & effect relation with limited observations . E.g when in two or three incidents whenever a comet appears & leader/s dies people develop a false belief that comets are bad omens.Similar such beliefs are coming under the category Superstition. The word is composed of two Sanskrit words "Andha" (blind. false) and "Viswasa" (belief).
"Non" in French is spelled as "non."
non non non nom non non,on on nnn
It is non-zero.It is non-zero.It is non-zero.It is non-zero.