- "Suum
cuique" (classical Latin: [ˈsʊ.ũː ˈkui̯kᶣɛ]), or "Unicuique suum", is a
Latin phrase often translated as "to each his own" or "may all get their...
-
court adopted a new
official seal,
amending the
Latin phrase Suum
cuique to Suum
cuique tribuere. The
Supreme Court,
along with the
Court of Appeals, constitute...
-
dedicated the
royal coat of arms, the
Prussian black eagle with the
motto "suum
cuique" imprinted. On 18 January, he
crowned himself and his wife
Sophie Charlotte...
- das ˈzaɪnə]) is the
literal German translation of the
Latin phrase suum
cuique,
meaning "to each his own" or "to each what he deserves".
During World War...
-
Omnia sunt
communia Post-scarcity
economy Parasitism (social offense) Suum
cuique To each
according to his
contribution Use
value Workers of the world, unite...
-
derived from the
Prussian Order of the
Black Eagle, with the
motto Suum
Cuique (Latin
meaning "To each his own," a
phrase derived from Cicero), as their...
- over the porch,
together with
Moore impaling Twittye, and the
motto 'Suum
cuique pulchrum.'
Historic England (25
October 1951). "Fawley
Manor House (Grade...
-
Aeneid 9.184–184: dine hunc
ardorem mentibus addunt, / Euryale, an sua
cuique deus fit dira cupido?
Diskin Clay, "De
Rerum Natura: Gr****
Physis and Epicurean...
-
Hohenzollern Iron
Cross Monarchism in
Romania Order of the
Black Eagle and Suum
cuique Order of the
Crown (Prussia) and Gott mit uns
Order of the Red
Eagle Prussian...
-
Sinas suscepta ab
Societate Jesu (1617), vol. 1, p. 31: "Præter hunc
tamen cuique Provinciæ
vernaculum sermonem,
alius est
universo regno communis, quem ipsi...