semper ubi sub ubi

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

Mock Latin, involving a pun on wear and where.

Proverb[edit]

semper ubi sub ubi

  1. (humorous) Always wear underwear.
    • 2004, Bill Sherk, 500 Years of New Words (page 138)
      And on the subject of “below” or “under,” there is the famous line that every student of Latin knows by heart: Semper ubi sub ubi.
    • 2010, Richard A. Davis, The Intangibles of Leadership, page xii:
      Kids, always remember these words: semper ubi sub ubi.
    • 2019, Michael Mitchell, Final Fire: A Memoir:
      While our teacher conducts a declension drill we busily draw jock straps and pushup bras on the statuary in our Living Latin textbooks. We pass notes with crude Latin jokes — Semper ubi sub ubi — Always wear underwear. Snigger, snigger.