Results for: nemo solus satis sapit
Latin English
numquam se minus otiosum esse quam cum otiosus, nec minus solum quam cum solus essetnever less idle than when wholly idle, nor less alone than when wholly alone (Cicero)
Numquam se minus solum quam cum solus essetYou are never so little alone as when you are alone. (Cicero)
nunquam minus solus quam cum solusnever less alone than when alone (Cicero)
nunquam nimis dicitur, quod nunquam satis disciturthat is never too often repeated that is never sufficiently learned (Seneca)
nunquam se plus agere, quam nihil quum ageret; nunquam minus solum esse, quam quum solus essethe said he never had more to do than when he had nothing to do, and never was less alone than when alone (Cicero, quoting Scipio Africanus)
ohe!, jam satis est!hey!, that’s enough already! (Horace)
omnes amicos habere operosum est; satis est inimicos non habereit is an arduous task to make all men your friends; it is enough to have no enemies (Seneca)
omnia scelera etiam, ante effectum operis, quantum culpæ satis est, perfecta suntall crimes are committed, so far as the blame attaching to them is concerned, before they are actually carried into effect (Seneca)
omnibus invideas, Zoile; nemo tibiyou may envy all men, Zoilus; but no man envies you (Martial)
postremo nemo ægrotus quidquam somniat tam infandum, quod non aliquis dicat philosophusin short, no sick man ever dreamed of anything so absurd that one or another philosopher has not said it (Varro)
prima est hæc ultio, quod se judice nemo nocens absolviturthis is the first of punishments, that no guilty man is acquitted if judged by himself (Juvenal)
q.s. (quantum satis)as much/many as one needs
quare vitia sua nemo confitetur? Quia etiam nunc in illis est. Somnum narrare vigilantis estwhy does no one confess his vices? It is because he is yet in them. It is for a waking man to tell his dreams (Seneca)
quas dederis, solus semper habebis opesthe wealth which you give away will ever be your own (Martial)
quem di diligunt, adolescens moritur, dum valet, sentit, sapitthe one whom the gods love dies young, while he has strength and senses and wits (Plautus)
 

Translations: 136150 / 205

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EUdict is online since May 9, 2005 and English<>Croatian dictionary on tkuzmic.com since June 16, 2003.

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