^^Latino dixit.
http://www.albertobordi.it/alberto_latinista/pillole.htm
Post hoc, ergo: propter hoc; discernere
tra cause ed effetti.
wp/nolite
margaritas aspergere _ante_porcos
wp/Ad_impossibilia_nemo_tenetur
wp/Fiat_iustitia_et_pereat_mundus
Solvitur ambulando. Si risolve camminando.
wp
Diverse attribuzioni.
Diogene di Sinope (412 a.C.- 323 a.C) che con due semplici parole confutò il
paradosso di Zenone, ai più conosciuto come il paradosso di Achille e la
tartaruga, che mirava a negare il movimento. Zenone, filosofo discepolo di
Parmenide.
Sant'Agostino (354 - 430)
rivistanatura
Quote in Arthur Conan Doyle Fictions.
Arthur Conan Doyle often used latine quotes in his works. He read and studied
Latin during his school days at Stonyhurst College, held by Jesuits.
arthur-conan-doyle.com
- « Sic Transit Gloria Mundi! »
- Thus passes the glory of the world. (My Friend the Murderer)
- « Sed Quantum Mutatus Ab Illo! »
- But how changed from what he once was. (The Heiress of Glenmahowley)
- « Populus me sibilat, at mihi plaudo. Ipse domi simul ac nummos
contemplor in arca. »
- Il popolo mi fischia, ma io mi applaudo da me, a casa mia, quando
contemplo le mie ricchezze in cassaforte.
- The public hiss at me, but I cheer myself when in my own house I
contemplate the coins in my strong-box.
- The public hisses at me, but I applaud myself in my own house, and
simultaneously contemplate the money in my chest.
- « De Jure Inter Gentes »
- Of the Law between peoples. (A Study in Scarlet, 926)
- « Omne ignotum pro magnifico »
- Everything unknown is beautiful. (The Red-Headed League, 55)
- « Locus Standi »
- Place of standing. (The Adventure of the Copper Beeches, 584)
- « Vox Populi, Vox Dei »
- The voice of the people is the voice of God. (The Adventure of the
Abbey Grange, 609)