Results for: ille
Latin English
ille(masc. nom. sing.) THAT (house) is filthy
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)
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
det ille veniam facile, cui venia est opusthe one who needs pardon should readily grant it (Seneca)
diis proximus ille est quem ratio, non ira movet, qui facta rependens consilio punire potesthe is next to the gods, whom reason, not passion, impels, and who, after weighing the facts, can measure the punishment with discretion (Claudian)
dissimiles hic vir, et ille puerhow different from the present man was the youth of earlier days (Ovid)
est deus in nobis, et sunt commercia cœli. Sedibus ætheriis spiritus ille venitthere is a god within us, and we hold commerce with heaven. That spirit comes from abodes on high (Ovid)
est pater ille quem nuptiæ demonstranthe is the father whom marriage points to as such
felix ille tamen corvo quoque rarior alboa lucky man is rarer than a white crow (Juvenal)
festinare nocet, nocet et cunctatio sæpe; tempore quæque suo qui facit, ille sapitit is bad to hurry, and delay is often as bad; the wise person is the one who does everything in its proper time (Ovid)
fortunatus et ille deos qui novit agresteshappy the person who knows the rural gods (Virgil)
illae ille(fem. pl. nom.) THOSE (women) must die!
 

Translations: 115 / 51

Your Recent Searches

Total number of language pairs: 544
Total number of translations (in millions): 15.4

Recent searches

Lat>Engille
Fre>Itarival
Ger>KurKuh
Eng>Itarancid
Eng>Itascathing
Eng>Finblowfly
Ita>Engendemia
Fre>Pornotaire
Eng>Armhemp
Jpk>Eng
Eng>Irisupplier
Eng>Spafern
Cro>Itacikla
Fre>Engazeroles
Eng>Pormammock
Chi>Eng包含
Cro>Porustanak
Pol>Espobrzydliwy
Eng>SweNorseman
Hun>Engrepedezett
Fre>Croprès
Ger>EngFreon
Eng>Croerratic