- Ad
vitam aut
culpam (Law Latin,
which literally means "for life or fault") is a
condition of
appointment or tenure, and the
corresponding principle of...
- life i.e., "to life everlasting". A
common Biblical phrase ad
vitam aut
culpam for life or
until fault Used in
reference to the
ending of a
political term...
- up the
senate just by
saying something that
sounded like landica: hanc
culpam maiorem an il-lam dicam? ("Shall I call this
fault greater or that one?"...
-
February 2018. "Pobreza
extrema aumenta 11% no último ano;
economistas culpam trabalho informal".
Brasil de Fato. 12
April 2018. "A very
meaty scandal...
-
England in 1640–1. He was also
constituted of the
privy council ad
vitam aut
culpam by the
parliament of
Scotland 11
November 1641.
During the wars of Montrose...
- Police"
repeated in yellow, at the top. Its
current motto is in Latin,
Culpam Poena Premit Comes ("Punishment
follows closely upon the
heels of crime")...
-
story among his
Emblemata under the
heading Parem delinquentis et
suasoris culpam esse (The
fault belongs alike to the
wrongdoer and the persuader) and was...
-
vires colligit pontique mites**** freta, hoc ipsa
petra ecclesiae canente culpam diluit.
Surgamus ergo strenue!
gallus iacentes excitat, et
somnolentos increpat...
-
potest mereri nec demereri; et ideo non
debuit ante
corpus produci, ne ante
culpam puniretur, et ne
absque corpore meretur vel demereretur. — ****c
autem positioni...
- life i.e., "to life everlasting". A
common Biblical phrase ad
vitam aut
culpam for life or
until fault Used in
reference to the
ending of a
political term...