Results for: infandum, regina, jubes renovare dolorem
Latin English
infandum, regina, jubes renovare dolorema grief too great to be told, O queen, you bid me renew (Virgil, Aeneas’s reply to Dido)
da quod jubes et jube quod vis. Imperas nobis continentiamgive what you command, and command what you give. You impose continence upon us (St. Augustine)
domina omnium et regina ratioreason is the mistress and queen of all things (Cicero)
Elizabeth Regina/Eduardus Rex (E.R.)Queen Elizabeth/King Edward
et genus et formam regina pecunia donatmoney, like a queen, bestows both rank and beauty (Horace)
Floreat regina reginaMay it flourish. (motto of the City of Regina, Saskatchewan Canada)
ilicet infandum cuncti contra omina bellum contra fata deum, perverso numine poscuntforthwith, against the omens and against the oracles of the gods, all to a man, under an adverse influence, clamor for unholy war (Virgil)
infandum renovare doloremto renew an unspeakable grief (adapted from Horace)
justitia virtutum reginajustice is the queen of virtues
magna est vis consuetudinis; hæc ferre laborem, contemnere vulnus et dolorem docetgreat is the force of habit, teaching us as it does to bear fatigue and to despise wounds and pain (Cicero)
majore tumultu planguntur nummi quam funera, nemo dolorem fingit in hoc casu. … Ploratur lacrimis amissa pecunia verismoney is bewailed with a greater tumult than death; no one feigns grief in this case. … The loss of money is wept over with true tears (Juvenal)
mene salis placidi vultum fluctusque quietos ignorare jubes? Mene huic confidere monstro?do you desire that I should not distrust the appearance of the placid sea, and of the waves which are now quiet? Do you wish that I should confide in such a monster? (Virgil)
nudo detrahere vestimenta me jubesyou order me to strip the clothes from a naked man (Plautus)
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)
qui se ultro morti offerant, facilius reperiuntur, quam qui dolorem patienter ferantit is easier to find men who will volunteer to die than men who will endure pain with patience (Julius Cæsar)
 

Translations: 115 / 22

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