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No. But the Latin phrase in re ("in the matter [of]") finds its equivalent in the English word "regarding". The pronunciation is as follows: een ray.

The Latin preposition in, although it is usually translated in English as "in" or "into", can also mean "against". A number of Cicero's orations have Latin titles of the form cited, where In has this meaning. This includes perhaps Cicero's best-known oration (it is the source of the quotation "O tempora! O mores!"), which is known in Latin as In Catalinam, and in English as "Against Catiline".

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15y ago

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