You mean sic, but in fact that means just "thus". If you wanted to say "thus it stands" in Latin you'd say sic stat.
Originally, it was meant to stand for "Kool." It now does not stand for anything, thus making KDE stand for "K Desktop Environment."
This it stands = Sic statLet it stand (used in proofreading, editing) = Stet
Latin -- nihil, meaning "nothing" ; a from the Latin " ad " -- meaning to Thus, you get " reduction to nothing ".
The Latin word sic, often in brackets, and meaning "thus," is used to indicate that an author's spelling or other unconventional usage is intentional, and is not to be " corrected" by an editor.
> there by In Latin, "sic stat," or even simply "sic." By the way, in editing, the word "stet," which means "let it stand" in Latin, indicates that a word or section marked for deletion should stay in as originally written.
I don't know the answer to your question exactly, but the Latin stet is used often to mean that if something has been crossed out it should be uncrossed out. The word means 'let it stand'.
Thus is an old word meaning "thats how"
Originally from Latin and meaning 'of law' and thus legitimate and lawful
There is none. Sic = thus (but nothing more) Sic stat = Thus is stands
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The English word 'thus' may be translated into Latin by one of two words. One word is ita, which means 'in this fashion, so, thus'. Another word is sic, which means 'in this way, so, thus'.
Vincy, itself, has no meaning-- but it is presumably a nickname of Vincent, which came from the Roman Vincentius, and thus from the Latin vincere; "to Conquer."