Results for: par negotiis, neque supra
Latin English
par negotiis, neque supraequal to his business and not above it (i.e., he is suited to his work) (Tacitus)
arcanum neque tu scrutaberis ullius unquam; commissumque teges et vino tortus et iranever inquire into another man’s secret; but conceal that which is entrusted to you, though tortured both by wine and passion to reveal it (Horace)
assiduo labuntur tempora motu, non secus ad flumen. Neque enim consistere flumen. Nec levis hora potesttime glides by with constant movement, not unlike a stream. For neither can a stream stay its course, nor can the fleeting hour (Ovid)
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)
Cæsar non supra grammaticosCæsar has no authority over the grammarians
decet affectus animi neque se nimium erigere nec subjicere serviliterwe ought to allow the affections of the mind to be neither too much elated nor abjectly depressed (Cicero)
desiderantem quod satis est, neque tumultuosum sollicitat mare, non verberatæ grandine vineæ fundusque mendaxa storm at sea, a vine-wasting hail tempest, a disappointing farm, cause no anxiety to him who is content with enough (Horace)
ego sum rex Romanus et supra grammaticamI am king of the Romans and above grammar (Emperor Sigismund at the Council of Constance)
est profecto Deus, qui quæ nos gerimus auditque et videt; neque id verum existimo, quod vulgo dicitur, Fortuna humana fingit aptatque, ut lubetthere is certainly a God who sees and hears the things that we do; I cannot believe that which is ordinarily said, that Fortune makes and unmakes all human affairs at pleasure (Plautus)
frustra retinacula tendens ferter equis auriga, neque audit currus habenasin vain, as he tugs at the reins, is the charioteer borne along by the steeds, and the chariot heeds not the curb (Virgil)
hæc prima lex in amicitia sanciatur, ut neque rogemus res turpes, nec faciamus rogatibe this the first law established in friendship, that we neither ask of others what is dishonorable, nor ourselves do it when asked (Cicero)
imperator … intra ecclesiam, non supra ecclesiam estthe emperor is in the Church, not above the Church (St. Ambrose)
in omnibus negotiis prius quam aggrediare, adhibenda est præparatio diligensin all matters, before beginning, a diligent preparation should be made (Cicero)
Integer vitæ scelerisque purus non eget Mauris jaculis neque arcuThe man of upright life and free from crime has no need of Moorish javelin or bow. (Horace)
ipse Jupiter, neque pluens omnibus placet, neque abstinenseven Jupiter himself cannot please all, whether he sends rain or fair weather
 

Translations: 115 / 72

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