Ipso facto: Difference between revisions
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Amwelladmin (talk | contribs) Created page with "{{plainenglish|ipso facto|because of that very fact}}. Well, for one reason because ipso facto is a good deal neater and more elegant, Q.E.D. {{c|Latinism}}" |
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{{ | {{a|latin|}}{{plain|ipso facto|because of that very fact}} | ||
Well, for one | Well, for one thing, because [[ipso facto]] is neater and more elegant, [[Q.E.D.]] | ||
{{c| | Not to be confused — however likely it is to be, ''[[ipso facto]]'' — with an [[ipso facto clause]], which is a clause permitting a merchant to terminate her contract on her counterparty’s insolvency. In the world of financial derivatives documentation, a topic that excites animal passions like few others. | ||
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*[[Ipso facto clause]] | |||
{{c|Plain English}} |
Latest revision as of 12:57, 5 January 2021
The JC’s guide to pithy Latin adages
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Why say “ipso facto” when you mean “because of that very fact”?
Well, for one thing, because ipso facto is neater and more elegant, Q.E.D.
Not to be confused — however likely it is to be, ipso facto — with an ipso facto clause, which is a clause permitting a merchant to terminate her contract on her counterparty’s insolvency. In the world of financial derivatives documentation, a topic that excites animal passions like few others.