What does Hic est enim calix Sanguinis mei mean?
The traditional translation is "This is the cup of my blood"
What does 'Justicia est fides in lex' mean?
The sentence 'Justicia est fides in lex' contains an error. For Latin is a language that has case endings, to show the relationship of the parts of speech to the verb. In this case, the sentence contains the preposition 'in', after which the noun needs to be in the ablative case instead of the nominative, or subject. Therefore, the correct phrasing is the following: 'Justicia est fides in lege'. The word-by-word translation is as follows: 'justicia' means 'justice'; 'est' means [it] is'; 'fides' means 'faith'; 'in' means 'in'; and 'lege' means 'law. Therefore, the meaning in English is the following: Justice is faith in the law.
What does the Latin phrase 'Kirie elison' mean?
The phrase is actually in Greek, and the correct spelling is Kyrie eleison. It means "Lord, have mercy," and it usually alternates with Christe eleison, "Christ, have mercy," in a form of prayer used in the Liturgy of the Mass in the Roman Catholic, Greek Orthodox, and Anglican traditions.
What does virtus militude mean?
I believe you mean:
Verisimilitude: (from Latin verisimilitudo, from verus [true] + similitudo [similitude]); the state or quality of something that exhibits the appearance of truth or reality.
dude this ain't right verisimilitude is when the human arm gets detached from what is called the Asian hemisphere which is made from ancient times.
What is 'In Deus EGO Fides' in English?
These are the words "In", "God", "I", and "trust" translated, one by one, into Latin. However, they are far from a grammatical sentence. Deus is the wrong form to be the object of a preposition, and Fides is a noun, not a verb.
Deo confido is a much better translation.
This is not a grammatical sentence in Latin, because the pronoun ego ("I") and the verb amat ("loves") clash. If the intended meaning is "I love you", you should say just te amo, because the verb form amo includes the first-person subject "I".
Which part of the word autograph contains the Greek root meaning write?
Graph is the part of the word that contains the Greek root meaning "write."
What is the derivative of the latin word numquam?
Numquam means "Never" in Latin. It's similar to the word "Ever," which is "Umquam."
When you ask for the "derivative," you're asking where a word came from. Thus, one would ask, "what was the derivative of the English word 'visionary'?" And the answer would be "video, videre." One typically does not ask for the derivation of Latin words.
It should be "loquitur."
This phrase means "the thing speaks for itself."
What does the phrase 'de novo' mean in English?
The phrase 'de novo' is not actually English, it's Latin. It is an expression for 'from the beginning' 'afresh' or 'anew'. It is commonly used in law as well as chemistry and biology.
Master bad a servis wretched praise when life their servet
How do you spell Greek or Latin word Paleolithic?
P-a-l-e-o-l-i-th-i-c forn the Greek word paleo which means"old" and lithic wich comes form the Greek word lithos and it means "stone"
Gaius Julius Caesar [July 13, 100 B.C.E. - March 15, 44 B.C.E.] wrote 'De Bello Gallico'. It's the account of Caesar's successful struggles to subdue the populations of ancient Gaul'. The name of the book translates into English as 'About the Gallic War'.
The preposition 'de' means 'of, about'. The neuter adjective 'bello' means 'war'. The neuter adjective 'gallico' means 'Gallic, of or pertaining to Gaul'. In classical and liturgical Latin, the phrase is pronounced 'deh BEHL-loh GHAH-lee-koh'.
What do you think whats doctrine of Ultra Vires?
Doctrine of the ultra-vires Any transaction which is outside the scope of the powers specified in the objects clause of the MA and are not reasonable incidentally or necessary to the attainment of objects is ultra-vires the company and therefore void. No rights and liabilities on the part of the company arise out of such transactions and it is a nullity even if every member agrees to it. Consequences of an ultra-vires transaction: -1. The company cannot sue any person for enforcement of any of its rights. 2. No person can sue the company for enforcement of its rights. 3. The directors of the company may be held personally liable to outsiders for an ultra vires. However, the doctrine of ultra-vires does not apply in the following cases: - 1. If an act is ultra-vires of powers the directors but intra-vires of company, the company is liable. 2. If an act is ultra-vires the articles of the company but it is intra-vires of the memorandum, the articles can be altered to rectify the error. 3. If an act is within the powers of the company but is irregularly done, consent of the shareholders will validate it. 4. Where there is ultra-vires borrowing by the company or it obtains deliver of the property under an ultra-vires contract, then the third party has no claim against the company on the basis of the loan but he has right to follow his money or property if it exist as it is and obtain an injunction from the Court restraining the company from parting with it provided that he intervenes before is money spent on or the identity of the property is lost. 5. The lender of the money to a company under the ultra-vires contract has a right to make director personally liable.
What is the meaning of 'Thus always to tyrants'?
The original Latin to the English phrase 'Thus always to tyrants' is the following: Sic semper tyrannis, which means Thus always to tyrants. The word-by-word translation is as follows: 'sic' means 'thus, so, in this way'; 'semper' 'always'; 'tyrannis' 'tyrants'. It is the state motto of the Commonwealth of Virginia, in the United States of America. And it is what John Wilkes Booth [May 10, 1838-April 26, 1865] announced on April 14th before assassinating 16th U.S. President Abraham Lincoln [February 12, 1809-April 15, 1865].