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  • What would be the proper usage of Qua in a sentence?
    Qua (not to be confused with the ablative feminine form of qui) is a Latin adverb meaning "where; by which route" Read it as "as" when you read it Use it in scholarly or legal writing to refer to a specific role or conceptual category for an entity that could have more than one role conceptual category E g , All that is necessary is, that the arbiter, in the free exercise of his discretion
  • phrases - something qua something vs something simpliciter . . .
    It's hard to find a fundamental difference in how "X qua X" and "X simpliciter" are used There might be differences in connotation though, with qua suggesting something has multiple aspects and can be considered qua multiple things, while simpliciter means simply
  • latin - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Closed 5 years ago Some Latinisms are usually italicized in English whereas some Latin loanwords are not, even in the same text However, I cannot find any clear pattern Are there clear rules or guidelines about it? For example, should I italicize 'qua', 'a priori', or 'post factum'?
  • What do you call an unclear video or television image (in other words . . .
    A quick look for synonyms of 'poor quality' at WordHippo gives grainy fuzzy blurry distorted blurred bleary unclear unfocused foggy gauzy indistinct muzzy vague ill-defined low resolution low quality lacking definition poor quality Research is important on ELU
  • Why does quadratic describe second power when quad means four?
    In mathematics, quadratic means "involving the second and no higher power of an unknown quantity or variable" But the prefix quad- usually describes something that has to do with four, such as qua
  • Is there a word to describe the habit of acquiring and owning expensive . . .
    Is there a word to describe the habit of acquiring and owning expensive high quality things but usually choosing to use cheap things anyway?
  • A word for a statement that doesnt need to be said
    I don't think this has the right meaning From what I understand, a "sine qua non" is something that is indispensable, but the question asks for a word to describe statements that are unnecessary
  • What is the reasoning for the idiom in and of itself having the . . .
    Or, as someone else in this forum quoted, Bobby was the first pig I had met qua pig, not qua pork Finally, to truly come full circle, per se has seemed to slip from its original meaning of in itself by itself (that is, separated from its context) and now just flabbily refers to a kind of lack of clarity
  • Between the words throw up, vomit, and puke, is there a . . .
    There is a difference between a word being gross and its standing for something gross These words all stand for something that most people regard as gross, but none of them is gross qua word (although they do differ in how formal they are, as explained in Lambie's answer) (Cf DjinTonic's answer to a recent question about drop by )





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