Mundus alter is an excuse for a satirical description of London, with some criticism of the Romish church, its manners and customs, and is said to have furnished Swift with hints for Gulliver's Travels.
This is the Mundus Alter and Idem of Bishop Hall, an imitation of the later and weaker volumes of Rabelais.
From the "Mundus Subterraneus" of Athanasius Kircher.
First God projects from himself the ideal or archetypal world (mundus archetypus), i.
Peace I leave with you, my pacem meam do vobis: non peace I give unto you: not as quomodo mundus dat, ego do the world giveth, do I give vobis.
He was in the world, and per ipsum factus est, et the world was made by him, and mundus eum non cognovit.
Jesus saith to him: He est, non indiget nisi ut pedes that is washed, needeth not lavet, sed est mundus totus.
For God sent not his Son, suum in mundum, ut iudicet into the world, to judge the mundum, sed ut salvetur mundus world, but that the world may per ipsum.
The perfect continuity of monads in the mundus intelligibilis has also its counterpart in the mundus sensibilis in the diffusion or extension of physical things.
Et alla ek tou kosmou estin; mundus transibit et kai ho kosmos paragetai concupiscentia eius: kai he epithymia autou; qui autem facit voluntatem ho de poion to thelema Dei, manet in tou Theou menei eis ton eternum.
Footnote 24: One ought, therefore, not to say mundus intelligibilis, butmundus intellectus.
But we must not infer, from this truth, that when we contemplate possible essences, with all the characteristics we may detect in them, we are contemplating this mundus intelligibilis which is the Divine Mind.
This was the hope which was entertained of this Mundus Novus of Vespucius,--not a new world in the sense of a new continent.
It was different with the Mundus Novus of Vespucius.
Of all the delicacies in the whole mundus edibilis, I will maintain it to be the most delicate--princeps obsoniorum.
Such a community may exist, as in the case of the Quakers; but in order to exist, it must be comprest and hedged in by another society--mundus mundulus in mundo immundo.
Mundus alter et idem (another world and the same): a satire by Bishop Hall.
Now Mundus had a freed-woman, who had been made free by his father, whose name was Ide, one skillful in all sorts of mischief.
Mundus had been appointed general of the Illyrians, and by mere chance had happened to come under summons to Byzantium on some necessary errand, bringing with him Erulian barbarians.
And from the palace Mundus went out through the gate which, from the circling descent, has been given the name of the Snail.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "mundus" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.