Facto

/ˈfæktoʊ/ adjective

Definition

Short for 'de facto,' meaning existing in fact though not necessarily by legal right. Used to describe something that exists in reality regardless of official recognition.

Etymology

From Latin 'de facto' meaning 'from the fact' or 'in fact,' composed of 'de' (from) and 'factum' (something done or made). Used in English legal contexts since the 17th century to distinguish actual circumstances from legal or theoretical ones.

Kelly Says

The phrase 'de facto' versus 'de jure' (by law) captures one of law's greatest challenges—the gap between how things actually work and how they're supposed to work. This Latin distinction is still crucial in international relations, where de facto governments may rule without de jure recognition.

Translations

AMአማርኛ
ሚዛናዊ
ARالعربية
واقع
BNবাংলা
তথ্য
CACatalà
fet
CSČeština
fakt
DADansk
faktum
DEDeutsch
Fakt
ELΕλληνικά
γεγονός
ESEspañol
facto
FAفارسی
واقعیت
FISuomi
tosiasia
FRFrançais
facto
GUGU
તથ્ય
HAHA
gaskiya
HEעברית
עובדה
HIहिन्दी
तथ्य
HUMagyar
tény
IDBahasa Indonesia
fakta
IGIG
eziokwu
ITItaliano
fatto
JA日本語
事実
KKKK
факт
KMKM
ការពិត
KO한국어
사실
MRMR
तथ्य
MSBahasa Melayu
fakta
MYမြန်မာ
အချက်
NLNederlands
feit
NONorsk
faktum
PAPA
ਤੱਥ
PLPolski
fakt
PTPortuguês
facto
RORomână
fapt
RUРусский
факт
SVSvenska
faktum
SWKiswahili
ukweli
TAதமிழ்
உண்மை
TEతెలుగు
వాస్తవం
THไทย
ข้อเท็จจริง
TLTL
katotohanan
TRTürkçe
faktö
UKУкраїнська
факт
URاردو
حقیقت
VITiếng Việt
thực tế
YOYO
otitọ
ZH中文
事实
ZUZU
iqiniso

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