It means "in a simple degree or manner".
Speak simply
Dicto Simpliciter, Hasty Generalization
napoleon trying to convince the animals that if they dont rebell against humans jones will come back.
it's just simpliciter
Big Dicto
termination without just cause
the word dictionary came from a greek word "dicto" which means list of words.
The informal fallacy of accident (also called destroying the exception or a dicto simpliciter ad dictum secundum quid) is a deductively valid but unsound argument occurring in statistical syllogisms (an argument based on a generalization) when an exception to a rule of thumb is ignored. It is one of the thirteen fallacies originally identified by Aristotle. The fallacy occurs when one attempts to apply a general rule to an irrelevant situation. For example: Cutting people with knives is a crime. → Surgeons cut people with knives. → Surgeons are criminals.
m.d.u. more dicto utendus, to be used as directed
The most basic root is "dic-", used with many words involved with speaking or saying.The word where "Dictate" comes from is "dicto, dictare, dictavi, dictatus": To say repeatedly, to dictateThis word is a modified form of:Dico, -ere, Dixi, Dictus: to speak or say
Ditto marks are the " you put under a word in a list when you don't want to write it again. Ditto is slang for Me too! Or - the same as to what that other person just said. It comes from the Italian "detto" or the Latin "dicto" both of which mean "(already) said".
Nicholas Hill has written: 'The \\' -- subject(s): Historic districts, Urban renewal, Conservation and restoration 'Philosophia Epicurea,Democritiana,Theophrastica proposita simpliciter,non edocta'
The most basic root is "dic-", used with many words involved with speaking or saying.The word where "Dictate" comes from is "dicto, dictare, dictavi, dictatus": To say repeatedly, to dictateThis word is a modified form of:Dico, -ere, Dixi, Dictus: to speak or say