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Ad infinitum et ultra
Ad infinitum et ultra












ad infinitum et ultra

ad infinitum et ultra

Why Ronin? A ronin is a samurai who no longer belongs to a clan, wandering alone. The founder, Mike, explained the team name this way: With my transition to Ronin Velosport, I am excited to continue representing a team with an ethos I believe in fully. While I’ll always believe red is the fastest color, purple might be the coolest color! Moving forward, I am excited to continue supporting Neighborlink Fort Wayne in their mission to serve the local community, and am proud to continue wearing the Neighborlink logo as a part of my current race kit. To start, I am incredibly grateful for the opportunity that Team Neighborlink gave me throughout the last three years to learn and develop as a cyclist and racer. I will also be racing for a new team IRL (in real life) this year: Ronin Velosport. I’ve benefited from the camaraderie and challenge of Zwift racing, and am continually impressed by the many incredibly strong women racing!įollow the action on Instagram at - and currently competing in the ZRL Women’s Playoffs for a spot in the Zwift Racing Premier League! Our motto is “Ad Infinitum Et Ultra,” expressing the limitless potential of the team. For the last several weeks, I have been racing virtually as a part of the Zwift Racing League for the Absque Fines women’s team. Though it will be my first mountain bike race of the season, it is not my first race of the year. Now, it’s time to rest, refuel, and recharge for the season opener on Sunday (3/7), the Stokesville 60k in Stokesville, Virginia! As of Sunday (2/28), I finished out the largest-volume training block I’ve ever had, with eight weeks, 1,826 miles, 108,000 feet of climbing, and 103 hours of riding.

#Ad infinitum et ultra full#

These past few months have been packed full of training, as I’ve been steadily increasing my training load in preparation for the start of the racing season. I plan to begin a thread on that topic some day.It’s officially 2021 and the first mountain bike race of the season is this weekend! The stoke is high for Stokesville 60k! So that by "we should" I just meant "in an ideal case of restituted pronunciation" (which rarely occurs).

ad infinitum et ultra

Even if you attempted to do it again, you wouldn't probably do what is meant by it. My advice is then that you don't need to do it (at least not in these type of recordings). So I didn't mean my remark as if you did something wrong, I just wrote that as a kind of remark that: "it is correct in what we usually consider as correct in speaking/reading, if we acknowledge that we don't the labiovelarization". We had a super-long discussion about it in the pronunciation thread about its articulation and we haven't reached a clear consensus. The problem is that nobody even attempts it: the restituted pronunciation is in 99% practiced everywhere and by everybody with "q" read in that Italian way you did (also I normally do it like that) - that is two consecutive sounds +. in fact labiovelarization is something completely else, it's a bit vague how it should be exactly done in practice. Also with my questions (so I can hope to learn - sorry lots of them).Ĭlick to expand.Hmm. I would really appreciate your help in stringing these words (or other options) together in an appropriate structure, that gives closest meaning. I know there are other words for 'forever', but I like the sound and sentiment of perpetuo if in fact that meaning is correct. Perpetuo - constantly, without interruption, forever. Also while we are on this phrase, how do you pronounce the -que? Is it, as in a queue of people, or as in queen? Please explain the difference these changes would have in meaning. Is it utlraque or utlroque? (was the 'o' someone's typo)Īnd should it be infinitum or infinitatem? (both are used in other thread) Which is more correct? I note people have said it should be in rather than ad. So reading the other thread, I understand the following is ok?Īd infinitum ultraque - to infinity and beyond. I would really like to get this engraved in Latin onto keepsakes for them. (They often add 'more' or 'most' to beat me in the amount of love we are expressing). It has become a bedtime catch-phrase with my children to say: "I love you to infinity and beyond, forever". Could you please help me by clarifying some of the discussion in this thread.














Ad infinitum et ultra