-
forbearance and un****ailable
moral courage."
Levius fit patientia,
quicquid corrigere est
nefas (What
cannot be
quite cured, is made
easier by patience) — Horace...
-
court of
Charlemagne and his successors. Subsequently,
words such as
corrigere, emendare, renovare,
reformare and
their synonyms,
readily became the...
-
plural correas.
Correa is from the
Latin corrigia 'fastening', from
corrigere 'to straighten', 'to correct'),
applied as a
metonymic occupational name...
- word is
originally a
Roman title, corrector,
derived from the
Latin verb
corrigere,
meaning "to make straight, set right,
bring into order."
Apart from the...
-
meaning "a
leather strap or belt" (Latin corrigia, "fastening," from
corrigere, "to
straighten or to correct"),
applied as a
metonymic occupational name...
-
skillful hand)
Canadian Orthopaedic ****ociation: Pietate, Arte et
Scientia Corrigere (With comp****ion,
skill and
knowledge we correct,
straighten or set right)...
- who died May 29, 1749, aet. 77.
Durum sed
levius fit
patientia quicquid corrigere est nefas. Thy will be done ! Vivian, p.166; Pole, Sir
William (d. 1635)...