Carpediem罗马高尔夫怎么样俱乐部怎么样

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Carpediem Roma Golf Club
Via di Marco Simone 80,
Marco Simone
Score from 17 reviews &
CarpeDiem Roma Golf Club offers a wellness area, and self-catering apartments with private patio or balcony and views of the Lazio countryside or the nearby Marco Simone Golf Club. Exit 12 of Rome's GRA orbital road is a 10-minute drive away. Parking is free.
The air-condtioned apartments come with a fully equipped kitchen, elegant furniture, and a satellite flat-screen TV. Some apartments are on 2 levels and feature 2 bathrooms.
The wellness area is complete with indoor swimming pool, hot tub, sauna and Turkish bath. Massages can also be booked.
Roma Golf Club CarpeDiem is set between 2 natural parks, and just 9 km from Tivoli Terme.
Availability
The most recent booking for this hotel was made on 6 Mar at 09:20 from Argentina.
Activities
Golf course (within 3 km)
Food & Drink
Restaurant
Pool and wellness
Fitness centre
Indoor pool (all year)
Shuttle service (surcharge)
Common areas
Cleaning services
Ironing service
Business facilities
Fax/photocopying
Miscellaneous
Non-smoking rooms
Family rooms
Non-smoking throughout
Air conditioning
WiFi is available in the hotel rooms and is free of charge.
Free private parking is possible on site (reservation is needed).
Policies of Carpediem Roma Golf Club
These are general hotel policies for Carpediem Roma Golf Club. As they ma please also check the room conditions.
16:00 - 21:00 hours
08:00 - 11:00 hours
Cancellation / Prepayment
Cancellation and prepayment policies vary according to room type.
Children and extra beds
There is no capacity for extra beds in the room.
Pets are not allowed.
Accepted credit cards
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The hotel reserves the right to pre-authorise credit cards prior to arrival.
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信息提交成功!From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
For other uses, see .
inscribed "carpe diem"
Carpe diem is a
usually translated to "seize the day", taken from a poem in the
(book 1, number 11) in 23 BC by the poet .
Carpe is the
"pick or pluck" used by
to mean "enjoy, seize, use, make use of". Diem is the accusative case of the noun
"day". A more literal translation of "carpe diem" would thus be "pluck the day [as it is ripe]"—i.e., enjoy the moment. In western education the tag is now often rendered as "take advantage of the opportunities arising in the day."[]
Tu ne quaesieris, scire nefas, quem mihi, quem tibi
finem di dederint, Leuconoe, nec Babylonios
temptaris numeros. ut melius, quidquid erit, pati.
seu pluris hiemes seu tribuit Iuppiter ultimam,
quae nunc oppositis debilitat pumicibus mare
Tyrrhenum. Sapias, vina liques et spatio brevi
spem longam reseces. dum loquimur, fugerit invida
aetas: carpe diem, quam minimum credula postero.
Don't ask (it's forbidden to know) what end
the gods have given me or you, Leuconoe. Don't play with
either. How much better it is to endure whatever will be!
Whether Jupiter has allotted you many more winters or this one,
which even now wears out the Tyrrhenian sea on the opposing rocks, is the final one
be wise, be truthful, strain the wine, and scale back your long hopes
to a short period. While we speak, envious time will have {already} fled:
seize the day, trusting as little as possible in the next day.
Perhaps the first written expression of the concept is the advice given by
to , telling him to forgo his mourning and embrace life although some scholars see it as simply urging Gilgamesh to abandon his mourning, "reversing the liminal rituals of mourning and returning to the normal and normative behaviors of Mesopotamian society."
In , the phrase is part of the longer "carpe diem, quam minimum credula postero", which can be translated as "Seize the day, put very little trust in tomorrow (the future)". The ode says that the future is unforeseen and that one should not leave to chance future happenings, but rather one should do all one can today to make one's future better. This phrase is usually understood against Horace's
background. The meaning of "carpe diem" as used by Horace is not to ignore the future, but rather not to trust that everything is going to fall into place for you and taking action for the future today.
The phrase ???? ?? ?????, ????? "And if not now, then when?" .
An 1898 German postcard, quoting ""
"Collige, virgo, rosas" ("gather, girl, the roses") appears at the end of the poem "De rosis nascentibus" ("Of growing roses", also called Idyllium de rosis) attributed to
or . It encourages youth to enjoy life b compare "Gather ye rosebuds while ye may" from "".
De Brevitate Vitae ("On the Shortness of Life"), often referred to as , ("Let us rejoice") is a popular academic , on taking joy in student life, with the knowledge that one will someday die. It is
Latin, dating to 1287.
Horace himself parodies the phrase in his satire "". He uses the phrase carpe viam meaning "seize the road" to compare the two different attitudes to life of the person (or in this case, a mouse) living in a city and in the countryside.
Related but distinct is the expression "" ("remember that you are mortal") which carries some of the same connotation as "carpe diem". For Horace, mindfulness of our own mortality is key in making us realize the importance of the moment. "Remember that you are mortal, so seize the day." Over time the phrase "memento mori" also came to be associated with penitence, as suggested in many
paintings. Today many listeners will take the two phrases as representing almost opposite approaches, with "carpe diem" urging us to savour life and "memento mori" urging us to resist its allure. This is not the original sense of the "memento mori" phrase as used by Horace.
In the 1989 movie , the English teacher John Keating, played by , famously says: "Carpe Diem. Seize the day, boys. Make your lives extraordinary."
The soundtrack to the 2011 animated film
includes a track called "Carpe Diem".
The American punk rock band, , produced a song called "Carpe Diem" on their 2012 album . The chorus is "Carpe Diem, a battle cry, are we all too young to die? Ask for reason, and no reply, are we all too young to die?"
The English alternative rock band, , produced a song called "Carpe Diem" on their 2014 album . The chorus is "Carpe diem 'til the very end. I have no regrets. Carpe diem 'til the bitter end."
The American heavy metal band
produced a song called "Carpe Diem Baby" on their 1997 album . The chorus contains the line "Come squeeze and suck the day. Come carpe diem, baby!"
, 1986 film with Robin Williams
Lewis, Charlton T. (1890). "carpō". . New York, Cincinnati, and Chicago: .
by Quintus Horatius Flaccus.[]
Ackerman, Susan (2005). . Columbia University Press. pp. 130–131.  .
Perdue, Leo G. (2009). . Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht GmbH & Co KG. p. 57.  .
Harrison, S. J. (2012). The Cambridge companion to Horace. Cam Press. pp. 154, 168.  .
Jacks, Lorra (February 17, 2013). . .
in a collection of the works of
under the note "Hoc carmen scripsit poeta ignotus ("This poem was written by an unknown poet");  (),
Media related to
at Wikimedia Commons
The dictionary definition of
at Wiktionary
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