Et tu, Brute?
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Et tu, Brute?
Summary
Et tu, Brute? is an idiom[1]. Et tu, Brute? ranks in the top 5% of idiom entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (1,036 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- Et tu, Brute?'s instance of is recorded as idiom[3].
- Et tu, Brute?'s instance of is recorded as quotation[4].
- Et tu, Brute?'s instance of is recorded as Latin phrase[5].
- Et tu, Brute?'s instance of is recorded as winged words[6].
- Et tu, Brute?'s depicts is recorded as betrayal[7].
- Et tu, Brute?'s part of is recorded as Julius Caesar[8].
- Et tu, Brute?'s Commons category is recorded as Et tu, Brute[9].
- Et tu, Brute?'s said to be the same as is recorded as Tu quoque mi fili[10].
- Et tu, Brute?'s Freebase ID is recorded as /m/0624hr[11].
- Et tu, Brute?'s main subject is recorded as betrayal[12].
- Et tu, Brute?'s published in is recorded as Julius Caesar[13].
- Et tu, Brute?'s title is recorded as {'lang': 'la', 'text': 'Et tu, Brute?'}[14].
- Et tu, Brute?'s different from is recorded as last words of Julius Caesar[15].
- Et tu, Brute?'s different from is recorded as Kaì sú téknon[16].
- Et tu, Brute?'s different from is recorded as Tu quoque mi fili[17].
- Et tu, Brute?'s Lex ID is recorded as et_tu,_Brute[18].
Why It Matters
Et tu, Brute? ranks in the top 5% of idiom entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (1,036 views/month).[2] Et tu, Brute? has Wikipedia articles in 20 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[19] Et tu, Brute? is known by 28 alternative names across languages and contexts.[20]