Anno Domini
Carpe Diem
Veni, Vidi, Vici
Post hoc, ergo propter hoc
A. Anno Domini
With
Through
Against
In
I think, I am
I think, therefore I am
I am, therefore I think
To think is to be
Ad Hominem
Non Sequitur
Red Herring
Straw Man
Julius Caesar
Pompey the Great
Augustus
Mark Antony
Post hoc
Pro bono
Ex post facto
In vino veritas
Virgil
Ovid
Horace
Catullus
Melior
Optimum
Malus
Peior
Who benefits?
What is good?
When in Rome
Where is the love?
Let the buyer beware
Buyer's remorse
Buyer's paradise
Buyer's delight
For the public good
For the greater good
For the benefit of one
For the good of all
Ovid
Virgil
Aesop
Horace
Argumentum ad Ignorantiam
Non Sequitur
Red Herring
Straw Man
Voice of the people
Voice of God
Voice of reason
Voice of authority
False Analogy
Circular Reasoning
Begging the Question
Slippery Slope
Nominative
Genitive
Accusative
Dative
Whoever owns the land, it is theirs up to the sky and down to the depths
In the name of the Father
To be or not to be
Love conquers all
Hail Caesar, those who are about to die salute you
In the name of the Father
To be or not to be
Seize the day
Horace
Ovid
Catullus
Juvenal
Voice of nothing
Voice of the people
Voice of the gods
Voice of wisdom
Present
Imperfect
Future
Perfect
Remember to live
Remember to die
Remember to love
Remember to laugh
Seize the day
Love conquers all
In the name of the Father
Live and let live
Cicero
Seneca
Lucretius
Marcus Aurelius
By the fact itself
After the fact
By the law itself
For the greater good
Nominative
Genitive
Accusative
Dative
Always faithful
Always brave
Always strong
Always wise
And so on
For example
In the beginning
To the end
Cicero
Seneca
Marcus Aurelius
Epictetus
Out of many, one
In God we trust
Liberty or death
United we stand
Cicero
Seneca
Marcus Aurelius
Epictetus