• The phrase pecunia non olet is still used today to say that the value of money is not tainted by its origins. ... Pecunia non olet,—a Roman emperor said that."
  • This anecdote is the origin of the Latin phrase “pecunia non olet,” which means “money does not stink,” and is still used today to say that the value of money is not...
  • ..."bıbıcım pis para bu" tiksintiyle şikayet ettiğinde, babası bir altın sikkeyi oğlunun burnuna dayamış ve "pecunia non olet!(para kokmaz), atque e lotio est" (bu.
  • 1 Ayrıca bakınız. İçindekiler tablosunu değiştir. Pecunia non olet. 22 dil. ... Pecunia non olet ("Para kokmaz"), kalıplaşmış bir Latince deyiştir.
  • Pecunia non olet — meaning “money does not stink” or “money is not tainted” — is a famous phrase attributed to the Roman emperor Vespasian.
  • Pecunia non oletPecunia non olet” — or “money doesn’t stink” — is a phrase ascribed to the Roman emperor Vespasian, who in 70 A.D. imposed a urine tax.
  • Pecunia non olet. runafes tarafından 2013-10-18 tarihinde eklendi. ... Meanings of "Pecunia non olet".
  • When his son Titus objected, he said, we are told by Suetonius, ‘Pecunia non olet’ – ‘money doesn’t stink’. But does it?
  • Pecunia Non Olet,” a Roman maxim meaning “Money does not stink,” delves into the ethical ambiguity surrounding the origins of wealth.
  • When Titus replied it did not, his father replied, “Atqui ex lotio est” (“Yet it comes from urine” ) From this conversation the proverb “ Pecunia non olet”...