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I have some old WWII pins that have these phrases:

"Quis Separabit"
"Per Scientian Progredimur"
"Quopata Vocant"

2007-08-17 20:24:20 · 3 answers · asked by CherryPie 4 in Society & Culture Languages

Thanks so far. :) I actually (wrongly)guessed that it was "quopata". The letters on that word are scraped/rusted, so it was unclear.

I found one more that says: "ut viri volent". Any clue for this?

2007-08-17 22:17:55 · update #1

3 answers

That's Latin, not Italian.

Who will separate?
We progress through knowledge.
They call Quopata or, alternatively, The Quopata call. (What's this quopata? are you sure about this word? Anyhow, "vocant" means "they call").

I guess the correct wording: "Quo patres vocant", which means "Where ancestors call" ie. "To where...".

"Ut viri volent" means "As men will want", ie. "The same way as men will want".

2007-08-17 20:48:30 · answer #1 · answered by hispidus 3 · 1 0

Ut Viri Volent

2016-11-05 01:17:37 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Quis separabit? = Who shall separate us?
Per scientiam progredimur = Through learning we progress.
Can't help on this - can you check the spelling?

2007-08-17 21:41:26 · answer #3 · answered by JJ 7 · 0 1

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