"Way of denying" is an English equivalent of the Latin phrase modus tollēns. The logic-related phrase most famously references the sequence of proposition, conditional and contrapositive whereby "All Uruguayans are Latin Americans," "If someone is Uruguayan, then she is Latin American" and "If someone is not Latin American, then she is not Uruguayan." The pronunciation will be "mo-doos tol-lenz" in Church Latin and in classical Latin.
method of removing is the latin phrase of modus tollen
The word method can be translated as ratio or modus.
It stands for "Modus Operandi" in Latin, "Mode of Operating" in English. The way the crime was committed.
Modi operandi is the plural of modus operandi
Modus
modus
The Latin root for "mood" is "modus," which means "measure" or "manner." This term is related to various English words that convey a sense of method or way of doing things. In Latin, "modus" also refers to a particular state or condition, which aligns with the concept of mood in expressing emotional states or atmospheres.
Modus operandi (often used in the abbreviated forms M.O. or simply Method) is a Latin phrase, approximately translated as "mode of operation".
way, manner, kind
"M.O." is an abbreviation of the Latin phrase modus operandi, which roughly translated means "method of operation". In Criminology, this means the way by which someone has perpetrated/committed a crime.
It is Latin and was first used in 1654. http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/modus%20operandi
it means method of operating in English