quot homines tot sententiæ
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English
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From Latin, echoing line 454 of Terence’s Phormio:[1] quot (“how many”) + hominēs (“men”, “people”; nominative plural form of homō: “man”, “person”) + tot (“so many”) + sententiae (“opinions”, “thoughts”; nominative plural form of sententia: “opinion”, “thought”).
Pronunciation
[edit]- (Latinate) IPA(key): [ˌkʷot ˈhomineːs ˌtot senˈtentiai]
- (Received Pronunciation) enPR: kwŏt' hŏʹmĭnāz tŏt' sĕntĕnʹtĭī, IPA(key): /ˌkwɒt ˈhɒmɪneɪz ˌtɒt sɛnˈtɛntɪaɪ/
- (US) enPR: kwŏt' hŏʹmĭnāz tŏt' sĕntĕnʹtiī', IPA(key): /ˌkwɑt ˈhɑmɪneɪz ˌtɑt sɛnˈtɛntiˌaɪ/
Phrase
[edit]- There are as many opinions as there are people who hold them.
- 1995, Brian Vickers, William Shakespeare: The Critical Heritage, page 133:
- Different auditors, as he observes, have different habitudes; so that, were we to put this assertion to the proof by particular applications, we should possibly find quot homines tot sententiæ.
References
[edit]- “‖quot homines tot sententiae” listed in the Oxford English Dictionary [2nd Ed.; 1989]
- “quot homines tot sententiae, phr.” listed in the Oxford English Dictionary [draft revision; Apr. 2012]
- Notes: