I was not armed by nature and education with the intrepid energy of mind and voice--'Vincentem strepitus et natum rebus agendis.
Then after the suppression of the rebels in the North, the Popish Catholics being thought too weak to make a party, then did the Pope give them a toleration 'rebus sic stantibus et donec commoda executio Bullae fieri posset.
Stonyhurst, bears the title, "Narratio Patris Joannis Gerardi de rebus a se in Anglia gestis.
While at Rome in 1578 he published his Latin history De Origine, Moribus, et Rebus Gestis Scotorum.
His emblematic name, the Bird-Serpent, and his rebus and cross at Palenque, I have already explained.
This again confirms the theory of the rebusmeaning of the cross-hatching.
It has the hand as in 2020, the rebus also, and the sign for Ymix is slightly different, being modified with a sign like the top of a cross, the symbol of the four winds.
All of them have been pure picture-writing, except in so far as their rebus character may make them in a sense phonetic.
In the cases of these two gods we got the chiffre, and the rebus is still to seek.
We doubt whether this was one of the historian's first efforts, for every endeavour must have a beginning, and this rebus bears the marks of a practised hand.
Unfortunately for him, he had gone, not to Giraldus, but to 'Stonyhurst de rebus Hibernicis i.
To me it seems clear that the turtle constituted a rebus sign for the "hidden star" and concealed god, and I find that another Egyptian word could have served equally well for the same purpose, viz.
A careful analysis of this and of the astronomical images suffices, however, to disclose the limited scope of the meaning of such groups, each one being but a different rebus containing the same phonetic elements.
It does not appear impossible that the word khat=corpse may also have been brought into use in the rebus and furnished an anagram or allusion to the ak or centre.
Horus) reveal its appropriate use as rebus and symbol of the central "sun" god.
On the other hand, all agree in regard to many cases in which the clause rebus sic stantibus could justly be made use of.
That historical events can justify such State in considering itself no longer bound by such treaty according to the principle rebus sic stantibus (see below, [p] 539) is another matter.
On the other hand, the danger is counterbalanced by the fact that the frequent and unjustifiable use of the clause rebus sic stantibus by a State would certainly destroy all its credit among the nations.
But if an agreement cannot be arrived at on account of the unreasonableness of the other party, the clause rebus sic stantibus may well be resorted to.
Peter Martyr's De Rebus Oceanicis, or a literary embellishment of some private letters like the translation into Latin by Nicolo Syllacio of some letters he received from Guillelmo Coma who went on the voyage.
The references to the decisions of Trent have been taken from Denzinger, Enchiridion Symbolorum et Definitionum quae de rebus fidei et morum a conciliis oecumenicis et summis Pontificibus emanarunt (Wuerzburg, 1900), p.
Erat omnius tum mos, ut in reliquis rebus melior, sic in hoc ipso humanior: ut faciles essent in suum cuique tribuendo.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "rebus" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word. Other words: anagram; charade; riddle; sign