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Foreign phrases (Latin included)
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Reggia
(last edited Jun 07, 2009 03:06PM)
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Jun 07, 2009 03:01PM

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She remembered the Latin teacher at school translating "Dulce et decorum est pro patria mori" - it is a sweet and decorous thing to die for one's country.
~The Comforts of a Muddy Saturday by Alexander McCall Smith
This time, the passage itself has given the origin and meaning.

"Vouloir, c'est pouvoir." (Where there's a will there's a way)
"Con dinero baila el perro" (With money the dog dances)
and my favorite:
"No hay que ahorgarse en un vaso de agua" -- don't drown in a glass of water! :)

When I was teaching university and we had something like Ethics to teach to Business Studies students , we used to get a grim laugh amongst ourselves from " Oderint, dum metuant" which I think is supposed to be one of Caligula's favourites.
( let them hate so long as they fear)

maladie du pays - homesickness

Vien ici... ... (over the top of the glasses scowl) VITment!!

"My password? Of course. Three words, Ignis aurum probat. “Fire tests gold.” ‘The rest of the phrase: “…and adversity tests the brave.” How true. A strong password, strong indeed, exactly as required by the computer system." ~from Eleanor Oliphant is Completely Fine


Further investigations reveals that it's a flat hat made of silk, and usually carried under the arms ("bras").

I usually wear a good warm one when I have to be outdoors in the winter. I'd rather be comfortable than fashionable. :-)

"...Churchill clung to the theory that had brought him over the wall, out of the garden and through Pretoria. Toujours de l'audace. 'When hope had departed," he wrote, 'fear had gone as well.'"
Also, pour prendre congé meaning "to take my leave" which he wrote on the outside of an envelope to the government from whom he had just escaped imprisonment.
~from Hero of the Empire

"I feel a certain embarrassment in mentioning it to you."
The psychotherapist made a diffident gesture. "Please don't be concerned about that," he said. "Nihil humanum mihi alienum est, Mr Varg. Nothing human is foreign to me. In other words, I suppose, I've seen it all.
~from The Department of Sensitive Crimes

Rune parries with his own questions. "Why did it take us in the West centuries to learn a technique that was right under our nose? What else don't we know, eh, Digby? What else?"
Dr Orqvist. Please. What do you propose?"
"Call me Rune, please. Homo proponit, sed Deus disponit," Rune says, pointing heavenward. "I propose that you come to Saint Bridget's. We'll leave in the morning. But it's contingent on one thing."
Digby looks anxious. "What?"
"Tell me you like our plum wine."