Favorite latin phrase?

<p>Mine is definitely QED - Quod Erod Demonstratum</p>

<p>IT HAS BEEN PROVEN!!!</p>

<p>Obviously used at the end of a nifty mathematical proof. What a rewarding phrase!</p>

<p>What are yours??</p>

<p>QED is actually quod erat demonstrandum = "that which was to be demontrated."</p>

<p>Mortua lingua sola est bona -- "The only good language is a dead language."</p>

<p>What we have here is a failure to communicate</p>

<p>Quo usque tandem abutere patientia nostra?</p>

<p>Mine is:</p>

<p>Draco Dormiens Nunquam Titillandus = Never tickle a sleeping dragon. :)</p>

<p>"You got pwned." :)</p>

<p>"Cuius regio, eius religio"
it just stuck with me after AP Euro, lol.</p>

<p>&</p>

<p>"Multi famam, conscientiam pauci verentur"
Many fear their reputation, few their conscience.</p>

<p>Sheesh, a little up-tight Jcoveney (below)...but fine, I'll change it.</p>

<p>"Ut Tibi Sic Alteri"</p>

<p>= "I do unto thee as I do unto others"</p>

<p>way to ruin the thread smallz</p>

<p>libertas quæ sera tamen</p>

<p>Carpe Diem......................a lot of CCers should apply this philosophy to their life.</p>

<p>"Aut viam inveniam aut faciam."
--> "I'll find a way or I'll make one." :)</p>

<p>"Quod erat demonstrandum."
--> Signifies conclusion of a mathematically [correct] proof.</p>

<p>Spatium...ultima confinia....
Haec sunt itinera astranavis Incepti.
Huic missio quinque annorum: explorare mundos alienos novos,
petere vitam novam novosque cultus,
ire fortiter quo nemo iverit ante.</p>

<p>Arma virumque cano....</p>

<p>The beginning of a great epic!</p>

<p>Cogito ergo sum
Carpe diem</p>

<p>Carpe diem?</p>

<p>How terribly cliched</p>

<p>something... interruptus</p>

<p>it's stuck on the TIP of my toungue...</p>

<p>Veni, vidi, vici.</p>

<p>carpe diem</p>

<p>its simple and cliche but i love it. it reminds me of the dead poets society too which is a great movie.</p>

<p>"semper ubi sub ubi" apparently translates (verbatim) to "always wear underwear"</p>

<p>and I remember reading a joke where "cogito eggo sum" meant "I think, therefore I am a waffle."</p>

<p>No, but I like "cogito ergo sum." That, and "Veritas vos liberabit," which is "The truth shall set you free."</p>