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| gens togata (L: people wearing the togas) Roman citizens; civilians — Virgil, Aeneis 1: 282. |
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| genus irritabile vatum (L) the irritable tribe of poets — Horace, Epistulae 2: 2: 102. |
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| gli assenti hanno torto (It.) The absent are (always) in the wrong. |
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| gnthi seauton (Gk) Know thyself. — Solon (Delphi にある Apollo 神殿入口の上に刻まれた銘). |
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| Gott mit uns (G) God with us (Hohenzollerns 家のモットー). |
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| gradus ad Parnassum (L: a step to Parnassus) an aid in writing Latin or Greek poetry (cf. 本文 gradus). |
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| graeculus esuriens, in caelum jusseris, ibit (L: tell a hungry Greek to go to heaven, he'll go) A starving man will do anything. — Juvenal, Satirae 3: 78. |
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| gratia Dei (L) by the grace of God. |
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| graviora manent (L: greater afflictions remain) The worst is yet to come. (cf. Virgil, Aeneis 6: 84) |
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| grex venalium (L) a venal throng — Suetonius, De Claris Rhetoribus l. |
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| grosse tte et peu de sens (F) a big head and little sense. |
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| gutta cavat lapidem, non vi, sed saepe cadendo (L) The drop hollows out the stone not by force, but by constant falling. — Gariopontus, Passionarius 1: 17 (cf. A rolling stone gathers no moss; 「点滴石を穿(うが)つ」). |
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