facto

listen to the pronunciation of facto
Englisch - Englisch
{i} (Latin) part of the phrase "de facto" (in practice, in fact)
In fact; by the act or fact
de facto
In practice; in actual use or existence, regardless of official or legal status
de facto
In fact or in practice; in actual use or existence, regardless of official or legal status. (Often opposed to de jure.)

Although the United States currently has no official language, it is largely monolingual with English being the de facto national language.

de facto
A legally undeclared spouse. Usually spelled defacto
de facto corporation
A business entity that is treated as a corporation for certain purposes despite its failure to meet all of the formal requirements imposed by law for a corporation to exist
de facto corporations
: Plural of de facto corporation
ex post facto
Formulated or enacted after some event, and then retroactively applied to it
ex post facto
Retroactive
ipso facto
By that very fact itself. Compare: eo ipso.The Oxford English Dictionary (2007)

For Mises or Rothbard, it is simply confused to posit latent preferences; if two individuals fail to make an exchange, then this ipso facto demonstrates that at that moment at least one of them would not have benefited from the exchange.

de facto
(adjective) existing or holding a specified position in fact but not necessarily by legal right: a de facto one-party system
de facto
(adverb) in fact, whether by right or not. Often contrasted with 'de jure'
de facto
Some more Latin, meaning "in fact" or "actually " Something that exists in fact but not legally
de facto
(Latin) Literally actual, in reality
de facto
in fact
de facto
1 Latin term meaning "in fact " By virtue of the deed or accomplishment; actually Used to refer to a situation in which a condition or institution is operating as though it were official or pursuant to law, but which is not legally authorized Such situations may arise where, for example, an authorizing law is declared invalid, or required legal formalities have not been satisfied Compare De jure
de facto
A term used to denote a thing done in fact but without strict legal authority as contrasted with de jure, which denotes a thing done according to law
de facto
A standard accepted by the marketplace, but not officially sanctioned by a standards organization
de facto
standard:   A standard that is widely accepted and used, but lacks formal approval by a recognized standards organization
de facto
In fact In reality
de facto
(Latin: "in fact ) In reality, in fact, existing
de facto
In fact A state of affairs which must be accepted for all practical purposes, but does not have the sanction of laws behind it; as distinguished from de jure
de facto
Parent
de facto
existing in fact whether with lawful authority or not; "de facto segregation is as real as segration imposed by law"; "a de facto state of war"
de facto
Latin for "in deed, in fact, in reality" Refers to a fact or an act that occurs as a matter of practice and reality rather than from de jure, meaning a lawfully and rightfully occurring act Deferred Payments Money payments to be delayed for a future date or extended period of time
de facto
[Latin: as a matter of fact] something which, while not necessarily lawful or legally sanctified, exists in fact A common law spouse may be referred to a de facto wife or de facto husband: although not legally married, they live and carry-on their lives as if married A de facto government is one which has seized power by force or in any other unconstitutional method and governs in spite of the existence of a de jure government
de facto
in reality, in fact, actually existing
de facto
(Latin) In fact; actually; in reality
de facto
in reality or fact; "the result was, de facto, a one-party system
de facto
That which actually exists, even without lawful authority
de facto
existing without formal recognition
de facto
in reality or fact; "the result was, de facto, a one-party system"
de facto
in fact, even if not officially
de facto
As a matter of fact, actual
de facto
Existing in actual fact although not by official recognition
de facto
Latin: as a matter of fact; something which, while not necessarily lawful or legally sanctified, exists in fact A common law spouse may be referred to a de facto wife or de facto husband: although not legally married, they live and carry-on their lives as if married A de facto government is one which has seized power by force or in any other unconstitutional method and governs in spite of the existence of a de jure government
de facto
Actually; in fact; in reality; as, a king de facto, distinguished from a king de jure, or by right
de facto
existing but not officially recognized or legally established
de facto
existing in fact whether with lawful authority or not; "de facto segregation is as real as segration imposed by law"; "a de facto state of war" in reality or fact; "the result was, de facto, a one-party system
de facto
De facto is used to indicate that something is a particular thing, even though it was not planned or intended to be that thing. This might be interpreted as a de facto recognition of the republic's independence. de jure De facto is also an adverb. They will be de facto in a state of war. really existing although not legally stated to exist de jure
de facto precedent
precedent which actually exists
de facto segregation
segregation (especially in schools) that happens in fact although not required by law
ex post facto
After the fact; an act of fact occurring after some previous act or fact, and relating thereto
ex post facto
–– applied "after the fact," thereby disregarding the previous circumstances, status, or legal character of an event
ex post facto
after the fact, an act or fact occurring after some previous act or fact and relating thereto
ex post facto
from after the deed
ex post facto
[Latin: after the fact] Legislation is called ex post facto if the law attempts to extend backwards in time and punish acts committed before the date of the law's approval Such laws are constitutionally prohibited in most modern democracies For example, the USA Constitution prohibits "any ex post facto law" The only modern example of such law in the UK is the War Crimes Act 1991
ex post facto
After the fact, ordinarily used in reference to constitutional prohibition on ex post facto laws For example, a person cannot be punished for conduct committed before a criminal law was enacted
ex post facto
- Laws that may an act criminal when it was not criminal at the time that it was committed
ex post facto
After the fact The Constitution prohibits the enactment of ex post facto laws These are laws that permit conviction and punishment for a lawful act performed before the law was changed and the act made illegal
ex post facto
Latin: after the fact Legislation is called ex post facto if the law attempts to extend backwards in time and punish acts committed before the date of the law's approval Such laws are constitutionally prohibited in most modern democracies For example, the USA Constitution prohibits "any ex post facto law"
ex post facto
(Latin) Literally after the fact; fixing or changing punishment for an act after it was committed
ex post facto
1 Latin term meaning " after the fact " Rules especially to a law that makes punishable as a crime an act done before the passing of the law and that was innocent when done An ex post facto law is also one that makes a crime more serious than when it was committed, inflicts a greater punishment, or alters legal rules of evidence to require less or different testimony to convict than the law required when the crime was committed Such laws violate provisions of the Constitution of the United States, which provide that neither Congress nor state shall pass an ex post facto law
ex post facto
Term used to designate action taken to change the effect given to a set of circumstances This action relates back to a prior time and places this new effect upon the same set of circumstances existing at that time
ex post facto
Literally, "after the fact " This refers to laws or rules that prohibit and attempt to punish behavior engaged in legally before the enactment of the law
ex post facto
adj (1787): done, made, or formulated after the fact
ex post facto
From or by an after act, or thing done afterward; in consequence of a subsequent act; retrospective
ex post facto
subsequently, retrospectively, after the fact
ex post facto
affecting things past; "retroactive tax increase"; "an ex-post-facto law"; "retro pay"
ex post facto
(ex post fak'to) - After the fact; an act or fact, occurring after some previous act or fact, and relating thereto
ex post facto
affecting things past; "retroactive tax increase"; "an ex-post-facto law"; "retro pay
ex post facto law
a law that makes a particular action into a crime, and then punishes people who took that action before it had legally become a crime
in facto
Something that exists and is complete
ipso facto
Irrespective of all external considerations of right or wrong; absolutely; by the very deed itself It sometimes means the act itself carries the consequences (as excommunication without sentence of excommunication being directly pronounced) "Whatever the captain does is right ipso facto [i e because it is done by the captain], and any opposition to it is wrong, on board ship " - R H Dana By burning the Pope's bull, Luther ipso facto [by the very deed itself] denied the Pope's supremacy Heresy carries excommunication ipso facto
ipso facto
If something is ipso facto true, it must be true, because of a fact that has been mentioned. If a crime occurs then there is, ipso facto, a guilty party. used to show that something is known from or proved by the facts
ipso facto
By the fact itself or by the very nature of the case
ipso facto
by the fact itself; "ipso facto, her innocence was established"
ipso facto
by act of fact itself; automatically
ipso facto
by the fact that -
ipso facto
(Latin) By the act or fact itself; by that very fact
ipso facto
by the fact itself; "ipso facto, her innocence was established
recognition de facto
recognition of the existence of a new government or country
Türkisch - Englisch

Definition von facto im Türkisch Englisch wörterbuch

de facto hükümet
(Politika, Siyaset) de facto government
facto

    Türkische aussprache

    fäktō

    Aussprache

    /ˈfaktō/ /ˈfæktoʊ/

    Etymologie

    [ di-'fak-(")tO, dA-, dE- ] (adverb.) 1601. Medieval Latin, literally, from the fact.
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