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"Qui tacet consentit" (silence implies consent)

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Q: Latin 'silence equals consent'
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Related questions

Code of silence in LATIN?

code of silence


What is the latin word for silence?

Silentium.


How do you say silence in latin?

Silentium.


Does silence amount to accpetance?

This is really just a rephrasing of the old Latin rule of law: "qui tacet consentire videtur (one who is silent is seen to have given consent)." To acquiesce is to accept or to comply. So, it follows that if a person chooses silence as a response, then that is interpreted (rightly or wrongly) as acceptance.


Latin word consensus in English?

Agreement, consent, unanimity.


What does the consesus term mean?

Consensus means consent in Latin.


What does the name Tacy mean?

Tacy (Latin origin) means "silence." Or a nickname for Anastacia.


What do you call a mathematical sentence that contains a equals sign?

An equation. (Both "equals" and "equation" have the Latin root aequatio.)


What is the musical term meaning voice or instrument must be silent?

Could the answer be TACIT. It means to be silent etc. No, it is an adjective meaning "silent". The correct answer is TACET from the Latin for silence. In Latin it actually means: "let it be silent."


In silentio et spe erit fortitudo vestra. What does this saying mean in English?

"In silence and hope will be your strength": a quotation from Isaiah 30:15 in the Latin Vulgate translation.


Does 5000 kilometers equal 5 meters?

No, 5 kilometers equals 5000 meters (kilo is Greek for 1,000). 5000 millimeters equals 5 meters (milli is Latin for 1,000). Multiples of a meter are expressed in Greek and fractions of a meter are expressed in Latin.


How do you pronounce Latin vowels?

There are three major schools of Latin pronunciation. The traditional English method, which pronounces Latin words using English letter values (now mostly heard in legal contexts). Latin 'v' equals English 'v'. The Church, or Ecclesiastical, method, which pronounces Latin words using Italian letter values. This is the pronunciation traditionally used by the Catholic Church, and also by choirs (religious or not) singing Latin. Latin 'v' equals English 'v' here too. The Restored Pronunciation, which seeks to recover the Classical pronunciation of Caesar and Cicero (first century B.C.). Here, Latin 'v' equals English 'w'.