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Results for: no stone without a name (or, without a tale to tell) (Lucan, said of the fate of Troy)Translations 1 - 30 of 116
 English Latin
no stone without a name (or, without a tale to tell) (Lucan, said of the fate of Troy)nullum est sine nomine saxum
no stone without a name (or, without a tale to tell) (Lucan, said of the fate of Troy)nullum sine nomine saxum
a constant drip hollows a stonestillicidi casus lapidem cavat
a rolling stone gathers no mosslapis qui volvitur algam non generat
abandoned to fatefortunæ objectum esse
alas, how much better is your fate than mine! (Ovid)heu, melior quanto sors tua sorte mea!
and might was the measure of right (Lucan)mensuraque juris vis erat
and the fields where Troy once was (Virgil)et campos ubi Troja fuit
away with all delays—it is ever injurious to postpone, when you are in readiness (Lucan)tolle moras—semper nocuit differre paratis
by fleeing, men often meet the very fate they seek to avoid (Livy)fugiendo in media sæpe ruitur fata
change but the name, and the tale is told of you (Horace)mutato nomine, de te fabula narratur
commit us to hostility with every other nation, but avert from us civil war (Lucan)omnibus hostes reddite nos populis, civile avertite bellum
crime levels all whom it defiles (i.e., puts all on equal terms) (Lucan)facinus quos inquinat æquat
death is not subject to Fortune; the earth holds everything that she ever brought forth (Lucan)libera Fortunæ mors est; capit omnia tellus quæ genuit
death itself often takes flight at the presence of a man (Lucan)mors ipsa refugit sæpe virum
deep-seated are the wounds dealt out in civil conflict (or civil wars) (Lucan)alta sedent civilis vulnera dextræ
delay has always been injurious to those who are prepared (Lucan)semper nocuit differre paratis
divine law or command, fate, destiny, lawful, allowedfas
do not consider that anything has been done if anything is left to be done (Lucan)nil actum reputa si quid superest agendum
either the soul feels nothing after death, or death itself is nothing (Lucan)aut nihil est sensus animis a morte relictum aut mors ipsa nihil
either you pursue or push, O Sisyphus, the stone destined to keep rolling (Ovid)aut petis aut urgues ruiturum, Sisyphe, saxum
even from the first beginnings of the world descends a series of causes (Lucan)a prima descendit origine mundi causarum series
even the ruins have perished (i.e., there is nothing left) (Lucan)etiam periere ruinæ
every fate is to be overcome by enduringomnis sors ferendo superanda est
every man is the maker of his own fortune (or fate) (Appius Claudius)est unusquisque faber ipsæ suæ fortunæ
Fabius Verrucosus called a favor roughly bestowed by a hard man bread made of stone (Seneca)Fabius Verrucosus beneficium ab homine duro aspere datum, panem lapidosum vocabat
fable, story, tale, playfabula
faith and piety are rare among the men who follow the camp (whether political or military) (Lucan)rara fides pietasque viris qui castra sequuntur
far be that fate from us! (Ovid)procul omen abesto!
fate leads the willing and drags the unwilling (Seneca, after Cleanthes)ducunt volentem fata, nolentem trahunt
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EUdict is a collection of online dictionaries for the languages spoken mostly in the European Community. These dictionaries are the result of the work of many authors who worked very hard and finally offered their product free of charge on the internet thus making it easier to all of us to communicate with each other. For more information about the authors see Credits.

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