Results for: fortune%20and%20valor%20are%20mixed%20into%20one%20(Virgil)
English Latin
(fem. pl. dat.) the good fortune, TO WHICH he owed his crownquibus
(With) love, behaviour, words, actions. --- Virgil [Publius Vergilius Maro]Amore, more, ore, re
a bough grows in its place leaves of the same metal (Virgil)simili frondescit virga metallo
a child of fortune; a favorite son (Horace)fortunæ filius
a drop of good fortune rather than a cask of wisdomgutta fortunæ præ dolio sapientiæ
a feeble dart (or spear) thrown to no effect (i.e., a weak and ineffectual argument) (Virgil)telum imbelle sine ictu
a great crowd accompanying (Virgil)magna comitante caterva
a great fire, unless you feed it, spends its rage in vain (Virgil)magnus sine viribus ignis incassum furit
a great fortune is a great slavery (Seneca)magna servitus est magna fortuna
a great fortune is a great slavery to its owner (Publilius Syrus)fortuna magna magna domino est servitus
a great mind becomes a great fortune (Seneca)magnam fortunam magnus animus decet
a greater succession of events presents itself to my muse (Virgil)major rerum mihi nascitur ordo
a grief too great to be told, O queen, you bid me renew (Virgil, Aeneas’s reply to Dido)infandum, regina, jubes renovare dolorem
a moment of smiling fortune is of more avail [to a soldier] than if he were recommended to Mars by a letter from Venus (Juvenal)plus etenim fati valet hora benigni quam si nos Veneris commendet epistola Marti
a monster horrendous, hideous, and vast, deprived of sight (Virgil, of the blinded Cyclops, Polyphemus)monstrum horrendum, informe, ingens, cui lumen ademptum
 

Translations: 115 / 592

Your Recent Searches

Total number of language pairs: 544
Total number of translations (in millions): 15.4

Recent searches