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Biotech / Medical : Ligand (LGND) Breakout!
LGND 197.01-2.9%Dec 1 3:59 PM EST

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To: mike head who wrote (16254)3/2/1998 10:22:00 PM
From: Flagrante Delictu  Read Replies (1) of 32384
 
mike, All of a sudden, everybody's using the dead language. Remember squetch with " ad libitum"? And now you with
"pax et bonum". Interestingly, when one combines certain elements of both expressions, one arrives at the infamous motto of Count Dracula, " bitum et bonum". Bernie.

P.S. So that no one gets the wrong udea, "bitum" derives from the same root as bituminous, as in a kind of coal." Bonum" derives from thr Latin word for "good". Therefore a loose translation could be "Good energy." Of course, the Count himself might have intended "Good and Hard". As everyone knows "et" in Latin means "and".
"Bitum" can be taken as a modifier that describes the kind of coal, e.g. "hard".
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