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laudis and .
The tract in the Irish " Leabhar Breac " speaks of elevating the chalice " quando canitur Imola Deo sacrificium laudis ", but the Stowe, being a priest's book, is silent about any antiphon here, though the prayers said by the priest are given.

habet and ille
* His Royal Motto was qui non dat quod habet non accipit ille quod optat ( He who does not give what he has, does not receive what he wants ).

habet and .
Again, in the inventories in the catalogues, such notes as these may be met with: " Sunt et duo cursinarii et tres benedictionales Libri ; ex his unus habet obsequium mortuorum et unus Breviarius ", or, " Præter Breviarium quoddam quod usque ad festivitatem S. Joannis Baptistæ retinebunt ", etc.
Some versions of the legend suggest that subsequent popes were subjected to an examination whereby, having sat on a dung chair containing a hole called sedia stercoraria, a cardinal had to reach up and establish that the new pope had testicles, before announcing " Duos habet et bene pendentes " (" He has two, and they dangle nicely "), or " habet " (" he has ' em ") for short.
; Nemo dat quod non habet: You cannot give what you do not have.
i. 121 ,—" auriculas asini quis non ( for Mida rex ) habet!
*( 3 ) Linaa est populus, qui habet civitates VII.
The historical phrases Quod natura non dat, Salmantica non praestat ( what nature does not give, Salamanca does not lend, in Latin ) and Multos et doctissimos Salmantica habet ( many and very versed Salamanca has ) give an idea of the prestige the institution rapidly acquired.
Even an exhaustive title search of the chain of title would not give the purchaser complete security, largely because of the principle, nemo dat quod non habet (" no one gives what he does not have ") and the ever-present possibility of undetected outstanding interests.
Nemo dat quod non habet, literally meaning " no one gives what he doesn't have " is a legal rule, sometimes called the nemo dat rule, that states that the purchase of a possession from someone who has no ownership right to it also denies the purchaser any ownership title.
Here there is no epenthesis from a historical perspective, since the a-t is derived from Latin habet ( he has ), and the t is therefore the original third person verb inflection.
The caption reads :" Ihs dixit vulpes fossa habent ", a paraphrase of the start of Luke 9, 58 ( and Matthew 8, 20 ): " et ait illi Iesus vulpes foveas habent et volucres caeli nidos Filius autem hominis non habet ubi caput reclinet "-" Jesus said to him: The foxes have holes, and the birds of the air nests: but the Son of man hath not where to lay his head.
Ptolomaei: quae quidem translatio verbum: habet e verbo fideliter expressum.

ille and .
: Hora novissima, tempora pessima sunt — vigilemus. Ecce minaciter imminet arbiter ille supremus. Imminet imminet ut mala terminet, æqua coronet, Recta remuneret, anxia liberet, æthera donet.
Definite articles formerly were demonstrative pronouns or adjectives ; compare the fate of the Latin demonstrative adjective ille, illa, ( illud ), in the Romance languages, becoming French le and la, Catalan and Spanish el and la, and Italian il and la.
The Vetus Latina Bible contains a passage Est tamen ille dæmon sodalis peccati (" The devil is a companion of sin "), in a context that suggests that the word meant little more than an article.
This is the origin of Old French cil (* ecce ille ), cist (* ecce iste ) and ici (* ecce hic ); Spanish aquel and Portuguese aquele (* eccu ille ); Italian questo (* eccu iste ), quello (* eccu ille ) and obsolescent codesto (* eccu tibi iste ); Spanish acá and Portuguese cá, (* ecce hic ), Portuguese acolá (* ecce illic ) and aquém (* ecce inde ); Romanian acest (* ecce iste ) and acela (* ecce ille ), and many other forms.
The first French name for the island was " l ' ille de Vilmenon ", noted by Samuel de Champlain in a 1616 map, and derived from the sieur de Vilmenon, a patron of the founders of Quebec at the court of Louis XIII.
The Latin translation by the Hungarian Lénárd Sándor ( Alexander Lenard ), Winnie ille Pu was first published in 1958, and, in 1960, became the first foreign-language book to be featured on the New York Times Best Seller List, and the only book in Latin ever to have been featured therein.
Latin had several sets of demonstratives, including hic, haec, hoc (" this near me "); ille, illa, illud (" that over there "); and iste, ista, istud (" that near you ") – note that Latin has not only number, but also three grammatical genders.
The second set of Latin demonstratives ( ille, etc.
*- el /- il /- ille /- l /- le ( Norman-Francish lenite-c -/- g-or metathetic-i-dim.
*- eau /- el /- ella /- elle /- ello /- il /- illa /- ille /- illo /- le ( F-S-I-L bidim.
AD 95 ) recommends teaching students ut quotiens exclamandum erit lateris conatus sit ille, non capitis (" that when the voice has to be raised the effort comes from the lungs and not from the head ," Inst.
On 7 Feb., 1596, Pope Clement VIII addressed to the Ruthenian episcopate the Brief " Benedictus sit Pastor ille bonus ", enjoining the convocation of a synod in which the Ruthenian bishops were to recite the profession of the Catholic Faith.
By late-or post-Roman times Vulgar Latin had developed two distinctive terms for signifying assent ( yes ): hoc ille (" this ( is ) it ") and hoc (" this "), which became oïl and oc, respectively.
Whereas Latin had no definite or indefinite articles, medieval writers sometimes used forms of unus as an indefinite article, and forms of ille ( reflecting usage in the Romance languages ) as a definite article or even quidam ( meaning " a certain one / thing " in Classical Latin ) as something like an article.
Hic, ille, iste, and even the intensive ipse are often used virtually interchangeably.
In anticipation of Romance languages, hic and ille were also frequently used simply to express the definite article " the ", which Classical Latin did not possess.
In the poem The Life Removed, of which an excerpt is shown below, Fray Luis, following the beatus ille theme introduced by Horace, expounds upon the notion of choice and its consequences.
plactus ille lamentablis vere tibim competebat.
There is a school of weaponcraft and six schools of magic based on patron gods in the game world's mythos: Shal ' ille, Qor, Kraanan, Faren, Riija, and Jala.

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