Read The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Quotations Online
Authors: Elizabeth Knowles
motto of the city of Edinburgh; see
motto of the Royal Society
motto of the Mulvany family, quoted and translated by Rider Haggard in
The People of the Mist
(1894) ch. 1; still in use as motto of the R.A.F., having been proposed by J. S. Yule in 1912 and approved by King George V in 1913
post-classical saying
Gesta Romanorum
no. 103
motto of Elizabeth I
motto of the State of Virginia.
used at the coronation of Alexander V in Pisa, 7 July 1409, but earlier in origin.
motto of homeopathic medicine, although not found in this form in the writings of C. F. S. Hahnemann (1755–1843); the Latin appears as an anonymous side-note in Paracelsus
Opera Omnia
(
c.
1490–1541, ed. 1658) vol. 1
inscription in St Paul's Cathedral, London, attributed to the son of Sir Christopher Wren (1632–1723), its architect
Plutarch
Moralia
sect. 233a, no. 15
common saying from the 16th century
Beowulf
, translated by Kevin Crossley-Holland
The Battle of Maldon
(tr R. K. Gordon, 1926)
Anglo-Saxon Chronicle
for 1137
L'Alouette
(1953)
Ardèle
(1949)
speech, 1875
"Cors de Chasse" (1912)
"Le Pont Mirabeau" (1912)
Les Mamelles de Tirésias
(1918)
Oliver Wendell Holmes
The Autocrat of the Breakfast Table
(1858) ch. 6.
attributed