omni-, omn-
(Latin: all, every)
Labor omnia vincit.
Perseverance [Work] overcomes all difficulties.
Motto of Centenary College of Louisiana, Shreveport, Louisiana, USA; and the State of Oklahoma, USA.
The phrase/motto is a shortened form of Virgil's statement in his Georgics: Labor omnia vicit improbus, "Never-ending work conquered all things."
It is said that Virgil was describing the harshness of life following the Golden Age, when the earth had yielded its fruits without labor. Jupiter then decided to change everything, making life hard so mankind would learn and become independent.
Nemo mortalium omnibus horis sapit.
No mortal is wise at all times.
Non nobis sed omnibus.
Not for ourselves but for everyone [all mankind].
Non omnia possumus omnes.
We cannot all do everything.
Virgil, in the Aeneid, gives us this way to acknowledge a fact of life: No one can reasonably be expected to become expert in all things.
Omnia aliena sunt tempus tantum nostrum est.
Nothing is ours except time.
omniactive
Omnia Omnibus Ubique.
All Things for All People Everywhere.
Motto of Harrods's Department Store (of London).
omniarch
A ruler of all things.
Omnia vincit amor.
Love conquers everything.
omnibearing
omnibenevolence
Universal benevolence.
omnibenevolent
1. Sometimes used with “omnipotent”, “omnipresent”, etc.; benevolent towards everyone.
2. "All good"; God as utterly good with no trace of evil.
omnibus
omnicide
The destruction of everything as in a nuclear war.
omnicole
Living every where or in all places.
Related "all, every" word unit:
pan-, panto-.