- of poetry, "either to
please or to educate" (Latin: aut
delectare aut
prodesse).
Salons in the
tradition of the
French literary and
philosophical movements...
- Thought.
United States,
Journal of
Thought Fund, 2002. Wittig, Claudia.
Prodesse et Delectare: Case
Studies on
Didactic Literature in the
European Middle...
-
Dominus ****entit v****allo, ut vendat; prin****liter eius
intentius est,
prodesse vasallo; nisi
aliud appareat ex cir****stantiis concurrentibus; & tunc ubi...
- 1688, Shadwell's
Squire of
Alsatia initiated the
return to a
Horatian prodesse in comedy,
which had
already been put
forth in the
Preface to The Humorist...
-
Miami University Motto Prodesse Quam Con****i (Latin)
Motto in English "To
accomplish without being con****uous" Type
Public research university Established...
-
superior court requires an
inferior one to rule on a
matter it has neglected.
prodesse quam con****i To
Accomplish Rather Than To Be Con****uous
motto of Miami...
-
contained a coronet, lions, and a
shield with a cross,
along with the
motto "
Prodesse quam con****ii" ("to do good
rather than be con****uous"). Sir
Duleep Singh...
- from Late
Latin term
prodis "useful,"
which is
compared with the
Latin prodesse "be of use." The
sense of "having a high
opinion of oneself," not in French...
- "advise", or "warn".
Horace repeats this
maxim in
different wordings: "Aut
prodesse uolunt aut
delectare poetae aut
simul et
iucunda et
idonea dicere uitae"...
-
superior court requires an
inferior one to rule on a
matter it has neglected.
prodesse quam con****i To
Accomplish Rather Than To Be Con****uous
motto of Miami...