Most likely, a misspelling of loquitur, which means "he/she/it speaks" in Latin, as in Res ipsa loquitur - a legal term meaning the thing itself speaks or that the thing or circumstance itself is obvious and requires no further proof. If you drop a barrel of flour onto someone from a second story window and he dies, his family doesn't have to further prove that your barrel and therefore your negligence killed him ( the original case was just such a claim)
He speaks from a twist of the thing itself
It [the disorder] speaks for itself is the meaning of 'res ipsa loquitur' in terms of psychoses. In the word by word translation, the noun 'res' means 'thing'. The intensive pronoun 'ipsa' means 'itself'. The deponent verb 'loquitur' means 'it speaks'.
It should be "loquitur." This phrase means "the thing speaks for itself."
The term 'res ipsa loquitur' is a latin phrase that is used in the court of law to describe when a person has been harmed by negligence. The phrase literally means "the thing speaks for itself". Or in other words it is evident that a person was harmed by another failing to use caution or being careless.
This literally means, "It (thing) speaks for itself" or it is self evident, explanatory
a person, place, or thing, that stands for itself and for something beyond itself .... That's not the answer we want man.
This is very likely a misquotation of the common Latin phrase (originally spoken by Cicero), res ipsa loquitur, "the matter itself speaks" (usually translated "the thing speaks for itself"). It is used in common law to mean that the nature of an accident can be sufficient evidence of negligence all by itself, even without independent evidence concerning the defendant's behavior.
Yes the word itself is a bad word. It carries a wrong meaning with itself. One should be absolutely far away from this thing.
The Latin verb to speak is loqui. This is a deponent verb, which means that it is conjugated using passive forms even though the meaning of the verb is active.In the present tense, the forms are:loquor - I speakloqueris - you (singular) speakloquitur - he/she/it speaksloquimur - we speakloquimini - you (plural) speakloquuntur - they speak
the Standard of Care ... - - - - - - Res ipsa loquiter[Latin, The thing speaks for itself.] A rebuttable presumption or inference that the defendant was negligent, which arises upon proof that the instrumentality or condition causing the injury was in the defendant's exclusive control and that the accident was one that ordinarily does not occur in the absence of Negligence.
the object begins to want you