![]() ![]() I guess my whole purpose is because I just went through a very detrimental experiance in my life and "conquered by no enemy" & "after the darkness, light" bring about the exact feeling that I have been through. I love the meaning behind the sayings and I understand where you are coming from. Please believe that I mean no disrespect in pointing out that such a tattoo might easily be liable to serious misinterpretation. I will close by advising you to be especially slow, if you are female, in having any regimental motto engraved on your person. I started this post by urging long thought before getting a tattoo. I would render "conquered by no enemy" as victus a nullo hoste (masculine) or victa a nullo hoste (feminine). But despite many assertions to the contrary on the web, it does not (as far as I am concerned) mean "conquered by no enemy", but rather "unconquerable by any enemy", which is not quite the same thing, is it? Nulli expugnabilis hosti, is, I know, the motto of the Royal Gibraltar Regiment. I am reminded of a saying that I have heard attributed both to Daniel Boone and to Davy Crockett, in which the frontiersman denies having ever been lost, but admits to having once been "a mite bewildered for five days". It seems to me that a more straightforward Latin translation of "I am not lost" would be perditus non sum (or for a female, perdita non sum). It depends, I suppose, on just what one means by "lost". But I would read the phrase first as "By no means am I wrong". I know that neutiquam erro is much found on the web as "I am not lost", and I admit that erro can mean "I wander astray". The words are a motto of the city of Geneva. So you might want to avoid the phrase if you are not of a Protestant persuasion. Post Tenebras Lux is associated with the Protestant "Reformation"- those quotes, by the way, are a legacy from the same people who taught me Latin in the first place. Next: both Post Proelia Praemia and Post Tenebras Lux are common sayings, and there is nothing wrong with them as Latin. And “Wireless Fidelity” – what does that mean? Nothing.I need to begin my response, tjade, by referring you to the Disclaimer at the top of this Section, and by urging you to think long and hard before tatoooing anything permanently on your body. The Wi-Fi Alliance … stay out of inventing standards. This tag line was invented after the fact … by the initial six member board and it does not mean anything either. This was a mistake and only served to confuse people and dilute the brand. So we compromised and agreed to include the tag line ‘The Standard for Wireless Fidelity’ along with the name. Wi-Fi Alliance founding member Phil Belanger, who oversaw the name selection process, states - “… some of my colleagues … could not imagine using the name “Wi-Fi” without having some sort of literal explanation. The Wi-Fi Alliance briefly used the tag line “The Standard for Wireless Fidelity” in their promotions, which was quickly dropped. They submitted “Wi-Fi” as a pun (play on words) of “Hi-Fi”, and created the W-Fi logo (a visual pun on the Yin-Yang symbol). The brand services consultancy Interbrand was hired by the Wi-Fi Alliance to invent an expression to substitute for “802.11”. “Wi-Fi” is not an abbreviation or an acronym. This law can be applied in remodeling Read moreĪccording to the Wi-Fi Alliance, which owns the Wi-Fi trademark. It says that the forces that are placed upon of a healthy person makes the bone to grows and remodel in accordance with that. Wolff’s law is framed by the German anatomist and surgeon Julius Wolff which states that boneos the healthy person will adapt to the loads under which it is placed. vertical growth of bones being dependent on age Answer Wolff law is concerned with: Answer: (C) The thickness and shape of the bone being dependant on stresses placed upon it. the thickness and shape of a bone being dependent on stresses placed upon it O D. the diameter of the bone being dependent on the ratio of osteoblasts to osteoclasts O C. the function of bone being dependent on shape O B. vertical growth of bones being dependent on age Wolff’s law is concerned with Select one: O A. ![]() Wolff’s law is concerned with Select one: O A. ![]()
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