That is the correct spelling of the Latin term "pro bono" meaning for the public good (literally "for good"), often implying unpaid or volunteer work.
The boy raked the neighbors leaves for pro bono. The surgery was pro bono. (Pro Bono doesn't just mean lawyers.)
I believe the answer is Pro Bono
pro bono means free of charge, so there is no fee for an attorney
pro bono pacis = for the sake of peace/for the good of peace
Bankruptcy attorneys should do their work pro bono.
pro bono means free
Find a local pro bono project for the area where your case will be heard.
Yes. There are civil pro Bono lawyer's in new Mexico.
Yes. There are civil pro Bono lawyer's in the new Mexico.
This is generally called "pro bono," short for "pro bono publico" which means "for the public good."
In the terms of medicine a 'pro bono' surgery means a surgery that does not have to be paid, is given for the good of public or in this case for the good of patient. Surgeons, mostly in USA where health-care has to be paid and is not free, have a quote of surgeries that can be made 'pro bono', that means without any charge to the user (patient) itself. The patients' will has to be made to the surgeon and if the surgeon decides to do a pro bono surgery, it has to get an approval from the chief of surgery to approve the pro bono surgery and give the surgeon('s) the place and material for the surgery. You can find more info on probono.website
For the [public] good is the English equivalent of 'pro bono [publico]'. In the word by word translation, the preposition 'pro' means 'for'. The neuter gender noun 'bono', in the ablative case as the object of the preposition, means 'the common weal, supreme good'. The adjective 'publico' means 'public'.