Results for: ille vir haud magna cum re, sed plenus fidei
Latin English
ille vir haud magna cum re, sed plenus fideihe is a man, not of large fortune, but full of good faith
Aio, quantitas magna frumentorum estYes, that is a very large amount of corn
alieno in loco haud stabile regnum estthe throne of another is not stable (i.e., sovereignty over a foreign land is insecure) (Seneca)
amentium, haud amantiumof lunatics, not lovers
animus tamen omnia vincit; ille etiam vires corpus habere facitcourage conquers all things; it even gives strength to the body (Ovid)
arma virumque cano, Troiæ qui primus ab oris Italiam fato profugus Laviniaque venit litora, multum ille et terris jactatus et alto vi superum, sævæ memorem Iunonis ob iramI sing of arms and the man who first from the shores of Troy came destined an exile to Italy and the Lavinian beaches, much buffeted he on land and on the deep by force of the gods because of fierce Juno’s never-forgetting anger (Virgil, opening lines of
beatus ille qui procul negotiis, ut prisca gens mortalium, paterna rura bobus exercet suis, solutus omni fœnorehappy the man who, remote from busy life, is content, like the earlier race of mortals, to plough his paternal lands with his own oxen, freed from all borrowing and lending (Horace)
bonis quod bene fit (or benefit) haud peritwhatever good is done for good men is never done in vain (Plautus)
captum te nidore suæ putat ille culinæhe thinks that you are taken with the smell of his kitchen (i.e., you have become a parasite) (Juvenal)
committunt multi eadem diverso crimina fato, ille crucem sceleris pretium tulerit, hic diademahow different the fate of men who commit the same crimes, for the same villainy one man goes to the gallows and another is raised to a throne
consuetudinis magna vis estgreat is the force of habit (Cicero)
Consuetudinis magna vis estThe force of habit is great. (Cicero)
cui mens divinior atque os magna sonaturum des nominis hujus honoremto the one whose soul is more than ordinarily divine, and who has the gift of uttering lofty thoughts, you may justly concede the honorable title of poet (Horace)
da fidei quæ fidei suntgive to faith that which belongs to faith (Francis Bacon)
defensor fideidefender of the faith (a motto of the English monarchy)
 

Translations: 115 / 166

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Total number of language pairs: 544
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