“Si Hoc Legere Scis Nimium Eruditionis Habes”

“Si Hoc Legere Scis Nimium Eruditionis Habes” has been printed (usually untranslated) on many T-shirts. It’s a modern Latin joke meaning: “If you can read this, you’re overeducated.”
 
The “ancient” Latin saying has been cited in print since only 1996.
 
       
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AMC: Celebrity fans discuss Brooke  
Judi Franz
11/7/96
In article <55sqfi$j…@ionews.ionet.net>,
Debbi Boonstra wrote:
 
>.(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address) (Judi Franz) wrote:
>>—
>>          Judi Franz             {jmf…@uci.edu}
>>          “Si Hoc Legere Scis Nimium Eruditionis Habes.”
>
>Judi!  You finally put in a sig.line!!  Did you change lawyers???
>  (Now, if I just had a translation….....)
 
Hi Debbi!!!! When are you coming back to SoCal??
 
No comment on your need for a translation, but you’ll get the message from the translation…....
 
“If you can read this, you’re overeducated”
 
😊))))))
 
Judi Franz             {jmf…@uci.edu}
“Si Hoc Legere Scis Nimium Eruditionis Habes.”
 
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Jerry Irvine Screwed Me !!!
Jerry Irvine
3/18/97
(...)   
“Si Hoc Legere Scis Nimium Eruditionis Habes”
“If you can read this you are over-educated”.
   
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HUM:What that means…
Sally Smith
4/24/97
Carol:
> Si Hoc Legere Scis Nimium Gruditionis Habes ... translated means…
>
> If you can read this, you are over-educated… I guess we haven’t reached
> that point yet, or are just in Brain FOG!
 
Well, since I took Latin before the attack of CFS, enough of it stuck deep enough to figure it out. Although I thought it was “Eruditionis”?
 
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**** CHICAGO BIG GAME ****
Rick Bowen
5/20/97
(...)   
It says, “If You Can Read This, You Are Over Educated.” 😊
 
Rick
TSRA Life Member
TIP #1822
“Si Hoc Legere Scis Nimium Eruditionis Habes”
   
Los Angeles (CA) Times
For the Love of Latin
The Dead Language Is Showing Signs of Life in a Revival Stretching From Specialized American Schools to Comic Books in—Where Else?—France

May 18, 1998 | PAUL DEAN | TIMES STAFF WRITER
(...)
Once in the mainstream, can T-shirt slogans be far behind?
 
They’re already here.
 
The current Signals catalog follows its highbrow PBS tradition with a $29 sweatshirt imprinted with “Si Hoc Legere Scis Nimium Eruditionis Habes.”
 
Translation: “If you can read this, you’re overeducated.”
 
Handy Latin Phrases
Last revised: 07/11/2001 13:08:11
Si Hoc Legere Scis Nimium Eruditionis Habes
If you can read this you’re over-educated
 
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(OT)Seen on T-shirts
Opinion8d
3/15/03
(...)
My all time fave…

Words in Latin that translated to:

If you can read this you are over-educated.
 
No, the translation was not printed anywhere on the shirt.
 
Twitter
Kari
‏@_KariedAway_
Si Hoc Legere Scis Nimium Eruditionis Habes <---TRANSLATION: If you can read this you're over-educated

9:31 AM - 4 Jun 2007
 
Google Books
Soma’s Dictionary of Latin Quotations, Maxims and Phrases
By S.O.M.A.
Victoria, BC: Trafford Publishing
2010
Pg. ?:
si hoc legere scis nimium eruditionis habes-if you can read this, you’re overeducated. This is a modern comic expression, written in Latin. [science, erudite, erudition]