Results for: qui mores hominum multorum vidit et urbes
Latin English
qui mores hominum multorum vidit et urbeshe who saw the manners of many men and cities (Horace, said of Ulysses)
abeunt studia in morespursuits become habits (Ovid)
adde quod ingenuas didicisse fideliter artes emollit mores nec sinit esse ferosadd the fact that to have studied faithfully the liberal arts softens behavior, not allowing it to be savage (Ovid)
ardua res hæc est opibus non tradere moresit is a hard thing not to surrender morals for riches (Martial)
ars; artis, mores; morium, induco, se geroconduct
at caret insidiis hominum, quia mitis, hirundothe swallow is not ensnared by men because of its gentle nature (Ovid)
aut formosa fores minus, aut minus improba vellem. Non facit ad mores tam bona forma malosI would that you were either less beautiful, or less corrupt. Such perfect beauty does not suit such imperfect morals (Ovid)
bellua multorum capitumthe many-headed monster (i.e., the mob)
Belua multorum es capitumThe people are a many-headed beast
Castigat ridendo moresOne corrects customs by laughing at them
centum doctum hominum consilia sola hæc devincit dea Fortunathis goddess, Fortune, single-handedly frustrates the plans of a hundred learned men (Plautus)
contra bonos moresagainst good morals
corrumpunt bonos mores colloquia pravaevil (or depraved) conversation will corrupt good morals (Erasmus, after St. Paul)
corrumpunt mores bonos colloquia malabad company corrupts good morals (1 Corinthians 15:33)
cum dilectione hominum et odio vitiorumwith love for humanity and hatred of sins (St. Augustine)
 

Translations: 115 / 91

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