ubi- (Latin: where).Ubi amor condimentum inerit, cuivis, placiturum credo.: Where love is the seasoning, I imagine the dish will please any one's taste. Ubi bene ibi patria.: Where there is good (prosperity), there is my fatherland (country) or Wherever I prosper, there is my fatherland. Ubi culpa est, ibi poena subesse debet.: Where the crime is committed, there ought the punishment to be undergone. Ubicunque ars ostentatur, veritas abesse videatur.: Where ever art makes itself felt, truth seems to be wanting. (Ars est celare artem: Art consists in its concealment). Ubi est thesaurus tuus, ibi est et cor tuum.: Where your treasure is, there is your heart also. [Vulgate, Matthew 6:21] ubiety:
The condition of being in a particular place.
Ubi jus, ibi officium.: Where there is a right, there is also a duty.
Ubi jus, ibi remedium.: 1. Where law prevails, there is a remedy. 2. Every violation of right has its remedy. Ubi jus incertum, ibi jus nullum.: 1. Where the law is uncertain, there is no law. 2. Where one's right is uncertain, no right exists. Ubi libertas, ibi patria.: Where there is freedom (liberty), there is my fatherland (country). Ubi mel, ibi apes.: 1. Where there is honey, there will be bees (Honey attracts bees). 2. Where the honey is, there the bees are. Ubi non est directa lex, standum est arbitrio judicis, vel procedendum ad similia.: Where there is no direct law, the opinion of the judge is to be taken, or references to be made to similar cases. Ubi non est lex, ibi non est transgressio, quoad mundum.: Where there is no law, there is no transgression, so far as relates to the world. Ubi panis, ibi patria.: Where ever there is bread, there is my fatherland (country). Ubi pugnantia inter se in testamento juberentur, neutrum ratum est.: Where repugnant or inconsistent directions are contained in a will, neither is valid. ubiquitarianism, ubiquitarian:
The Christian belief, held particularly by the Lutheran Church, that Jesus Christ is present in all places and at all times, not just in the Eucharist.
ubiquitous, ubiquitously, ubiquitousness:
Present, or seeming to be present, everywhere at the same time; omnipresent.
ubiquity:
1. The state, fact, or capacity of being, or seeming to be, everywhere at the same time; omnipresence.
Ubi re vera.: Where in reality. (When in truth or in point of fact).
2. Omnipresence; presence in several places, or in all places, at one time. A fiction of English law is the "legal ubiquity" of the sovereign, by which he is constructively present in all the courts. Ubi solitudinem faciunt, pacem appellant.: Where they create a desert, they call it peace (They create desolation and call it peace). Tacitus, in his Agricola, was quoting the leader of the Britons who was conguered or whose country was devastated by the invading Romans. Ubi sunt ui ante nos fuerunt.: Where are those who lived before us? (Title of a medieval lyric). Ubi supra.: 1. Where (mentioned) above. 2. Where above mentioned. Ubi tu Gaius, ego Gaia.: Where ever you are, Gaius, there I, Gaia, am. A formula used in Roman marriage. |