- The Mové, also
called Movere,
Western Guaymi, or Ngäbere, are a
Chibchan (Dorasque-Guaymi)
speaking people in
Panama (150,000) and
Costa Rica (4,300)....
- Guaymí, or Ngäbere, also
known as
Movere, Chiriquí, and Valiente, is
spoken by the
indigenous Ngäbe
people in
Panama and
Costa Rica. The
people refer to...
- I don't mean in boys, but in
those hairy old men 11 quī dūrōs
nequeunt movēre lumbōs. who can't get it up. 12 Vōs, quod mīlia
multa bāsiōrum
Because you've...
-
phrasing of the
principle in the
Latin maxim Stare decisis et non
quieta movere: "to
stand by
decisions and not
disturb the undisturbed". In a
legal context...
-
Bocas Del Toro Embera,
southeastern Darién
Province Ngäbe (including the
Movere and
Murire peoples),
mainly Chiriquí
Province Guna, Darién
Province and...
-
Similar to the less
common omnia dicta fortiora si
dicta Latina.
quieta non
movere don't move
settled things quilibet potest renunciare juri pro se inducto...
- movement," 1827, from
French motilité (1827), from
Latin mot-, stem of
movere "to move" (see move (v.)). "Botanical Nerd Word: Vagile". torontobotanicalgarden...
- the
Guaymic subgroup of the
Chibchan languages. Also
known as Ngäbere or
Movere.
Buglere language:
Spoken in the same
territories as Guaymí, the language...
-
early 20th century, it was
generally believed the name came from the
Latin movere (to move),
though a
derivation from the
French mot ("word", or "phrase")...
-
termed crotalistriae. Such was Virgil's Copa (2),
Crispum sub
crotalo docta movere latus. This line
alludes to the
dance with
crotala (similar to castanets)...