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British Airborne Forces - Ad Unum Omnes (distressed) T-Shirt

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A bilingual palindrome, yielding its English paraphrase, "Anger, 'tis safe never. Bar it! Use love!"

Livy: Book IX - The Latin Library

General pledge of victoria aut mors (" victory or death"). Motto of the Higgenbotham and Higginbottom families of Cheshire, England; participants in the War of the Roses. Also the motto for the United States 1st Fighter Wing, Langley Air Force Base in Virginia. There was no shortage of volunteers who came forward from nearly every regiment and corps in the British Army. The term is a legal phrase; the legal citation guide called the Bluebook describes ex rel. as a "procedural phrase" and requires using it to abbreviate "on the relation of", "for the use of", "on behalf of", and similar expressions. An example of use is in court case titles such as Universal Health Services, Inc. v. United States ex rel. Escobar.A traditional brocard. The full form is Interest reipublicae ut sit finis litium, "it is in the government's interest that there be an end to litigation." Often quoted in the context of statutes of limitation. systematic succession, concatenation: continuatio seriesque rerum, ut alia ex alia nexa et omnes inter se aptae colligataeque sint (N. D. 1. 4. 9) Esto quod es; quod sunt alii, sine quemlibet esse: / Quod non es, nolis; quod potes esse, velis -- Be what you are; let whoso will be what others are. Don't be what you are not, but resolutely be what you can. Circulus in probando -- Begging the question, or taking for granted the point at issue (literally a circle in the proof).

List of Latin phrases (A) - Wikipedia

En vérité l'amour ne saurait être profond, s'il n'est pas pur -- Love, in fact, can never be deep unless it is pure. A single example of something positive does not necessarily mean that all subsequent similar instances will have the same outcome. A phrase applied to the declarations or promulgations of the Catholic Supreme Pontiff (Pope) when, preserved from the possibility of error by the Holy Spirit (see Papal infallibility), he solemnly declares or promulgates ("from the chair" that was the ancient symbol of the teacher and governor, in this case of the Church) a dogmatic doctrine on faith or morals as being contained in divine revelation, or at least being intimately connected to divine revelation. Used, by extension, of anyone who is perceived as speaking as though with supreme authority. Grave nihil est homini quod fert necessitasRetired from office. Often used to denote an office held at the time of one's retirement, as an honorary title, e. g. professor emeritus and provost emeritus. Inclusion in one's title does not necessarily denote that the honorand is inactive in the pertinent office.

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