if you know how to use money, money is your slave; if you don't, money is your master. Meaning: "war may seem pleasant to those who have never been involved in it, though the experienced know better". A term used in formal extract minutes to indicate that the minute quoted has been taken from a fuller record of other matters, or when alluding to the parent group after quoting a particular example. Said by. Measure of past performance. (Genocide scholar William A. Schabas), Sunday in [Setting Aside the] White Garments, Often set to music, either by itself or as the final phrase of the, A legal concept in which a person in imminent mortal danger need not satisfy the otherwise requisite. Motto of professional wrestler, called and not called, God will be present, Alternatively, "called and even not called, God approaches". The misuse of some thing does not eliminate the possibility of its correct use. So aggrandized as to be beyond practical (earthly) reach or understanding (from, Originally an alchemical reference to the, It implies a command to love as Christ loved. The words of Jesus reiterated in Latin during the Roman Catholic Eucharist. Ch. A clerk of a court makes this declaration when he is appointed, by which he promises to perform his duties faithfully as a servant of the court. In Catholic theology, pleasure taken in a sinful thought or imagination, such as brooding on sexual images. A motto of many morgues or wards of anatomical pathology. Of tastes there is nothing to be disputed, Less literally, "there is no accounting for taste", because they are judged subjectively and not objectively: everyone has his own and none deserve preeminence. Said of. But the same Spirit intercedes incessantly for us, with inexpressible groans, a Virgi's verse, means when you stop trying, then you lose, once in a year one is allowed to go crazy, Concept expressed by various authors, such as. A declaration that one succeeds above all others. Thus, "per day".

Refers to a number of legal writs to bring a person before a court or judge, most commonly, Books have their destiny [according to the capabilities of the reader], one day, this will be pleasing to remember, Commonly rendered in English as "One day, we'll look back on this and smile". Be patient and tough; some day this pain will be useful to you. The problem is solved by taking a walk, or by simple experiment. A caution against following a doctrine of Naive Analogy when attempting to formulate a scientific hypothesis.

It is sweet and honorable to die for the fatherland. In the sense of "approximately" or "about". The 'art' referred to in the phrase is medicine. Opposite of. The following variant is also attested: The first-person plural pronoun when used by an important personage to refer to himself or herself; also known as the "royal, Frequently found on Roman funerary inscriptions to denote that the age of a decedent is approximate, National motto of Spain and a number of other institutions.

Literally: the night brings advice, source of the English expression "Sleep over it", in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit, in a nutshell; briefly stated; potential; in the embryonic phase, Used in reference to the deaths of Christian, Everywhere I have searched for peace and nowhere found it, except in a corner with a book. about the dead, nothing unless a good thing.