-
admitted but not
granted degrees, came to
Trinity College to
receive their ad
eundum degree; they were
known as
Steamboat ladies and the fees they paid helped...
- "going to go" Gerundive:
eundum "necessary to go" (used
impersonally only) Gerund: eundī "of going", eundō "by / for going", ad
eundum "in
order to go" The...
- Lewis-McChord,
Washington Nickname(s) "Red Patchers" Motto(s)
Promptus Ad
Eundum ("Willing to Go")
Engagements Operation Desert Storm Operation Iraqi Freedom...
-
Braggart Warrior Miles gloriosus 2.4.6-7 "Credo ego
istoc exemplo tibi esse
eundum actutum extra portam,
Dispessis manibus patibulum quom habebis" Plutarch:...
- for example, be
thereafter admitted or
incorporated to the same
degree ad
eundum at
Oxford or Cambridge—though few seem to have been so distinguished. It...
- of
Adelaide in 1912, and both
Osborn and his wife were
admitted BSc ad
eundum at the same ceremony. In 1928
Osborn accepted the
chair of
botany at the...
- good
physician must also be a philosopher) Si quis
Optimus Medicus est,
Eundum esse
Philosophum (Opt. Med.)) 3. Of
verbal sophistry De
Sophismatis in Verbo...
- Montreal.
Runnells completed her
medical degree in 1900. She
later held an ad
eundum medical degree from
McGill University, when her
medical school became part...
- ad
omnia (Cicero) 'there is no need to
reply to everything' mihī Arpīnum
eundum est (Cicero) 'I have to go to Arpinum' tuō tibī iūdiciō est ūtendum (Cicero)...
- construction, can also have an
impersonal gerundive,
ending in -um: mihī Arpīnum
eundum est (Cicero) 'It is
necessary for me to go to Arpinum' / 'I have to go to...