No
Amazon has a copy translated by Throop for $30.00.
Latin for yes and noSic et Non, an early scholastic text whose title translates from Medieval Latin as "Yes and No," was written by Peter Abelard. In the work, Abélard juxtaposes apparently contradictory quotations from the Church Fathers on many of the traditional topics of Christian theology. In the Prologue, Abélard outlines rules for reconciling these contradictions, the most important of which is noting the multiple significations of a single word. However, Abélard does not himself apply these rules in the body of the Sic et non, which has led scholars to conclude that the work was meant as an exercise book for students in applying dialectic (logic) to theology.
J. B. Descamps has written: 'Voyage pittoresques [sic] de la Flandre et du Brabant'
'and so on to infinity'
Jacques Colette has written: 'Kierkegaard et la non-philosophie' 'Histoire et absolu'
I could tell you if you told me the Latin words.
Laurence Burnez-Lanotte has written: 'Le chalcolitique [sic] moyen entre la Seine et le Rhin infe rieur'
Nicolas Perrot has written: 'Memoire sur les moeurs, coustumes et relligion [sic] des sauvages de l'Amerique Septentrionale' -- subject(s): Indians of North America
Diego Salazar has written: 'Specimen extemporalis examinis philosophiae rationalis, ethicae et ontologioe, [sic]' -- subject(s): Dissertations, Philosophy, Universidad Nacional Mayor de San Marcos, CSAIP
Happy New Year and Good(sic) Christmas to all
Phi Society's motto is 'Sic Semper Tyrannis Et Fides Super Omnia'.