Provuso: Difference between revisions

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This is not so much [[weaselry]] on steroids, but ''[[meisterwieselspiele]]'' at the hands of a 12th-dan weasel master. If you were a weasel playing ''[[Defender]]'', this would be like hitting the [[hyperspace]] button.
This is not so much [[weaselry]] on steroids, but ''[[meisterwieselspiele]]'' at the hands of a 12th-dan weasel master. If you were a weasel playing ''[[Defender]]'', this would be like hitting the [[hyperspace]] button.


{{seealso}}
{{sa}}
*[[Incluso]]
*[[Incluso]]
*[[Proviso]]  
*[[Proviso]]  

Revision as of 11:36, 18 January 2020

A proviso with an inbuilt incluso, such that the hand that takes away takes more than the other hand gave in the first place. Ninja stuff.

By this device one states a general principle, then caveats it so comprehensively that the end result bears no correlation at all with one’s original intent. Thus one does not merely weasel out of the original intention, but weasel your counterparty into accepting a whole new liability it cannot possibly have had in mind when it began discussing your original proposition.

This is not so much weaselry on steroids, but meisterwieselspiele at the hands of a 12th-dan weasel master. If you were a weasel playing Defender, this would be like hitting the hyperspace button.

See also

Plain English Anatomy™ Noun | Verb | Adjective | Adverb | Preposition | Conjunction | Latin | Germany | Flannel | Legal triplicate | Nominalisation | Murder your darlings