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What every state motto really means (Latin decoded)
State mottos are short by design. Most are three or four words, carved on great seals, printed on letterhead and copy-pasted onto official memos. Half of them are in Latin, a nod to Enlightenment-era ideas about republican virtue. A few are in Hawaiian, French, Spanish or Chinook trade jargon, remnants of the languages that were spoken in that territory before it became a state. This guide translates all 50 and explains where each phrase came from.
The complete list of 50 mottos with translations
| State | Motto | Language / Translation |
|---|---|---|
| Alabama | Audemus jura nostra defendere | Latin: "We dare defend our rights" |
| Alaska | North to the Future | English |
| Arizona | Ditat Deus | Latin: "God enriches" |
| Arkansas | Regnat populus | Latin: "The people rule" |
| California | Eureka | Greek: "I have found it" |
| Colorado | Nil sine numine | Latin: "Nothing without providence" |
| Connecticut | Qui transtulit sustinet | Latin: "He who transplanted still sustains" |
| Delaware | Liberty and Independence | English |
| Florida | In God We Trust | English |
| Georgia | Wisdom, Justice, Moderation | English |
| Hawaii | Ua mau ke ea o ka aina i ka pono | Hawaiian: "The life of the land is perpetuated in righteousness" |
| Idaho | Esto perpetua | Latin: "May it be perpetual" |
| Illinois | State sovereignty, national union | English |
| Indiana | Crossroads of America | English |
| Iowa | Our liberties we prize and our rights we will maintain | English |
| Kansas | Ad astra per aspera | Latin: "To the stars through difficulties" |
| Kentucky | United we stand, divided we fall | English |
| Louisiana | Union, justice, confidence | English |
| Maine | Dirigo | Latin: "I lead" |
| Maryland | Fatti maschii, parole femine | Italian: "Manly deeds, womanly words" |
| Massachusetts | Ense petit placidam sub libertate quietem | Latin: "By the sword we seek peace, but peace only under liberty" |
| Michigan | Si quaeris peninsulam amoenam circumspice | Latin: "If you seek a pleasant peninsula, look around you" |
| Minnesota | L'Etoile du Nord | French: "The Star of the North" |
| Mississippi | Virtute et armis | Latin: "By valor and arms" |
| Missouri | Salus populi suprema lex esto | Latin: "The welfare of the people shall be the supreme law" |
| Montana | Oro y plata | Spanish: "Gold and silver" |
| Nebraska | Equality before the law | English |
| Nevada | All for our country | English |
| New Hampshire | Live free or die | English |
| New Jersey | Liberty and prosperity | English |
| New Mexico | Crescit eundo | Latin: "It grows as it goes" |
| New York | Excelsior | Latin: "Ever upward" |
| North Carolina | Esse quam videri | Latin: "To be, rather than to seem" |
| North Dakota | Liberty and union, now and forever, one and inseparable | English |
| Ohio | With God, all things are possible | English |
| Oklahoma | Labor omnia vincit | Latin: "Labor conquers all things" |
| Oregon | Alis volat propriis | Latin: "She flies with her own wings" |
| Pennsylvania | Virtue, liberty and independence | English |
| Rhode Island | Hope | English |
| South Carolina | Dum spiro spero | Latin: "While I breathe, I hope" |
| South Dakota | Under God the people rule | English |
| Tennessee | Agriculture and commerce | English |
| Texas | Friendship | English |
| Utah | Industry | English |
| Vermont | Freedom and unity | English |
| Virginia | Sic semper tyrannis | Latin: "Thus always to tyrants" |
| Washington | Alki | Chinook trade jargon: "By and by" |
| West Virginia | Montani semper liberi | Latin: "Mountaineers are always free" |
| Wisconsin | Forward | English |
| Wyoming | Equal rights | English |
The 24 Latin mottos
Roughly half of US state mottos are in Latin. Most were adopted in the 1800s, when Latin still had prestige as the language of law, science and republican virtue. A few classics:
- Ad astra per aspera (Kansas): "To the stars through difficulties." Adopted in 1861, four months into the Civil War. The image is Bleeding Kansas: hard road, distant stars.
- Sic semper tyrannis (Virginia): "Thus always to tyrants." Coined by ancient Romans and later shouted by John Wilkes Booth after shooting Lincoln.
- Excelsior (New York): "Ever upward." Adopted in 1778, the shortest of all the Latin mottos, and lending its name to the Longfellow poem and Marvel Comics catchphrase.
- Esse quam videri (North Carolina): "To be, rather than to seem." From Cicero, De Amicitia.
- Montani semper liberi (West Virginia): "Mountaineers are always free." Adopted in 1863 when the state seceded from Confederate Virginia.
- Dum spiro spero (South Carolina): "While I breathe, I hope." From Cicero, Ad Atticum.
- Salus populi suprema lex esto (Missouri): "The welfare of the people shall be the supreme law." From Cicero, De Legibus.
Mottos in other languages
- Hawaii (Hawaiian): "Ua mau ke ea o ka aina i ka pono," spoken by King Kamehameha III in 1843 after the British restored Hawaiian sovereignty following a brief seizure.
- Minnesota (French): "L'Etoile du Nord," a nod to the French Canadian voyageurs who traded here in the 1700s. The state was carved from part of the Louisiana Purchase.
- Montana (Spanish): "Oro y plata," referring to the gold and silver rushes of the 1860s and 1880s.
- Maryland (Italian): "Fatti maschii, parole femine." A 17th-century Calvert family motto, controversial today for its gendered wording; the state officially recasts it as "Strong deeds, gentle words."
- Washington (Chinook Jargon): "Alki," meaning "by and by" or "eventually," used by early Puget Sound traders. The only US motto in a Native American trade language.
- California (Greek): "Eureka." Attributed to Archimedes and adopted in 1849 in reference to the Sutter's Mill gold strike.
The shortest and most memorable
Four states have a one-word motto: Maine ("Dirigo"), Utah ("Industry"), Rhode Island ("Hope"), and New York ("Excelsior"). New Hampshire's "Live free or die," from a toast by Revolutionary War General John Stark in 1809, is the most quoted, and appears on every state license plate. Alaska's "North to the Future," coined in a 1963 statewide contest, is the youngest, adopted after statehood in 1967.
Mottos that appear on flags and seals
- New Hampshire's "Live free or die" is embossed on every state license plate since 1971.
- Kansas's "Ad astra per aspera" appears above the state seal on the state flag.
- New York's "Excelsior" sits on the crest of the state coat of arms, above the shield.
- Virginia's "Sic semper tyrannis" appears on the state seal beneath a figure of Virtue standing over a fallen tyrant.
- Michigan's Latin motto, translated as "If you seek a pleasant peninsula, look around you," appears on the state flag inside a wreath.
Learn the mottos by playing
Statedoku uses mottos as constraints: "Latin motto", "Live free or die", "Eureka". Play the daily puzzle and the phrases stick without flashcards.
Play the state mottos puzzle β