Possunt, quia posse videntur
"They can because it seems they can."
The motto of Dumpton School is 'Latin: Possunt Quia Posse Videntur'.
Landon School's motto is 'Virtute et non vi'.
Let Plato be your friend and Aristotle but more let your friend be truth
The possessive form is posse's.
Yes, the noun 'posse' is a standard collective noun for:a posse of policea posse of sheriffsa posse of turkeysa posse of posersIn recent times I've also heard the term a posse of paparazzi.
The noun 'posse' is a standard collective noun for:a posse of policea posse of sheriffsa posse of turkeysa posse of posersIn recent times I've also heard the term a posse of paparazzi.
The posse rode out to search for the escaped prisoner.
You use some form of posse, "to be able," plus the infinitive of a verb. For example, if you wanted to say "can sing" ("to sing" = canere), the present tense forms would be:possum canere - "I can sing"potes canere - "You [singular] can sing"potest canere - "He, she, or it can sing"possumus canere - "We can sing"potestis canere - "You [plural] can sing"possunt canere - "They can sing"It would also be possible to use the verb scire ("to know") instead of posse. This would convey "can" in the sense of "know how to . . .". The forms of scire in the present tense are scio, scis, scit, scimus, scitis, sciunt.
that depends on the posse
Amelie Posse died in 1957.