Non sis arsholeus nec mercatum cum arsholibus facias
This article comes to you from the Jolly Contrarian’s legal maxim generation service.
Don’t be a penis, in Latin.
A handy rule when drafting a contract, negotiating one, reading one, going on tour, treating people you meet in your travels, and in life generally.
Be a good egg, and everything usually works out for the best.
There is a school of thought (though it may have but one student) that the central inquiry in any English court can be boiled down to the following simple question: “Who, in the sequence of events with which the court is concerned, was being the biggest dick?”
Note, though: little old ladies are prone to be awarded a handicap in the equity stakes.
Can I just extend the hand of gratitude to my secret Latin advisors, one of which pointed out that it was not non mentula esse, but nolli mentula esse; and the second (and, frankly, better)[1] one corrected the first’s spelling to noli mentula esse. Nil carborundum, etc.
Plain English Anatomy™ Noun | Verb | Adjective | Adverb | Preposition | Conjunction | Latin | Germany | Flannel | Legal triplicate | Nominalisation | Murder your darlings
- ↑ And not just better on account of being a show-jumping organist, although that is true.