Newsflash! Latin phrases don't make your argument stronger.

Sigh

I hate all of yoos.

Shouldn’t it be ‘I hate all of y’uns’??

-XT

I thought it was “youse?”

My head hurts.

I was trying to stress the pronunciation. Maybe “yooz”?

That’s more of a North Eastern expression from what I’ve seen…but then North Easterners don’t generally say ‘ya’ll’, so it doesn’t really fit. :stuck_out_tongue:

-XT

I’m going to use that. “Ya’ll of youse is driving me crazy!”

And…there’s your initiation!

I thought that went pretty well, didn’t you?

Morones Eunt Domus.

Can I have a string of beads or a card or sew-on patch? :stuck_out_tongue:

Thank you, Captain Dickus.

Quis custodiet ipsos octopodes?
Mark Norman, perhaps.

In one of his SF stories, Spider Robinson had a scene where two characters were at a spaceport to take a shuttle up to the orbiting industrial complex of Space Induistries Corp. Arriving at the proper gate to board the shuttle, they see a sign reading
S.I.C.
TRANSIT

beneath which a graffiti artist had scrawled
Gloria Mundi

Romanes Eunt Domus!

I think you’ve committed the pedicabo et irrumabo fallacy.

That would be cool! There’s no swag on this site, though, unfortunately. :frowning:

Here you go.

Y’all suck.

What makes arguments stronger is: Movens spectaculis vestris.

Totus Latinus in hoc filo asinum testiculos suget.

How is MO not a noun?

Argumentum postibus originalis invalidum est. Quod erat demonstratum.

[warning: not real Latin.]