- "Aut
inveniam viam aut
faciam" (or "Aut viam
inveniam aut
faciam") is
Latin for "I
shall either find a way or make one". The
first word "aut" may be omitted...
- brevity. The
meter of the poem is the
elegiac couplet. Ōdī et amō. Quārē id
faciam fort****e requīris. Nesciŏ, sed fierī sentiō et excrucior. I hate and I love...
-
crowned shield which shows the arms of the four countries, and the
legend FACIAM EOS IN
GENTEM UNAM ("I will make them one nation", from
Ezekiel 37:22) Jewitt...
- love
epigrams – his poem 85 is one of the latter. Odi et amo.
Quare id
faciam fort****e requiris. Nescio, sed
fieri sentio, et excrucior. I hate and I...
- ****ociation of Prep
Schools (IAPS). The
school motto is aut viam
inveniam aut
faciam, a
Latin phrase which translates literally as “Find a way or make a way”...
-
countries separating the
letters IR –
Iacobus Rex, King James, and the
legend FACIAM EOS IN
GENTEM UNAM ("I will make them one nation", from
Ezekiel 37:22)....
- pens in
saltire Proper.
Shield Azure semy of snow
crystals Proper.
Supporters On
either side a
Siamese Cat Proper.
Motto Aut
Inveniam Viam Aut
Faciam...
- Odi et amo.
Quare id
faciam, fort****e requiris? Nescio, sed
fieri sentio et excrucior. I hate and I love. Why do I do this,
perhaps you ask? I know not...
- (Jessie Moon Holton, 1866–1951). The School's
motto is
Inveniam viam aut
faciam—I will find a way or make one. In the
Upper School, Holton-Arms competes...
- simultaneously: if one ends, so does the other, and vice versa. aut viam
inveniam aut
faciam I will
either find a way or make one
Hannibal aut
vincere aut mori either...