This is the self verification of the facts mentioned about the statement made in a particular case for obtaining approval of concern authority legally.
Yes
Merebit; merebitur. ('Mereo' and the deponent 'mereor' mean the same thing, to deserve.)
For a detailed explanation - see: http://definitions.uslegal.com/d/deponent/
The root word of loquacious is loquor, a deponent verb whose principle parts are as follows: loquor, loqui, locutus. Loquor means "I speak."
Some synonyms for the term infinitive would be deponent, gerund, participle, verbification, non-finite, emplumed, epen, errabund, enniche, endorhiza, and epochal.
ego amor is in the deponent form of the verb. unlike the other translations that give the active meaning, ego amor is passive. simply it means i am loved. the same thing as amatus sum means i am loved.
Nascor, nasci, natus is deponent, meaning that it is passive in form but active in meaning. Thus "the earth is born" translates to "terra nascitur".
It [the disorder] speaks for itself is the meaning of 'res ipsa loquitur' in terms of psychoses. In the word by word translation, the noun 'res' means 'thing'. The intensive pronoun 'ipsa' means 'itself'. The deponent verb 'loquitur' means 'it speaks'.
While a certified court reporter creates the official written record of all depositions by typing the characters that comprise the particular code used by the individual reporter, the discovery statutes in state and federal jurisdictions provide the noticing attorney the option to specify that an audio visual record will be simultaneously created and subsequently certified, just as is the written record, at the expiration of the time within which the deponent-witness is allowed to review and object, if warranted, to whatever transcription or memorialization of the proceedings appears to compromise its accuracy. During a video deposition the camera is aimed at the face of the deponent exclusively with the sole exception of the momentary shot of the noticing attorney which may occur at the commencement of the proceedings.
I wasn't 100% sure about the latin verb (from which aggressive has been derived)... aggredior : to go to, approach, address, attack It's part of the deponent verbs (this means more or less that they have a passive declination form... but their meaning is active... i.e. as if "I have been seen" would have the meaning of "I have seen"...).
"Bracas meas vescimini" means "eat my shorts," as Bart might say to Cicero. Others say it means eat my pants. Bracas (often misspelled braccae) means "trousers." "Meas" qualifies "bracas" and means "my." Vescimini is the imperative plural of the deponent verb vescor (to eat).
The most basic word would be the deponent verb loquor, meaning 'speak'. While I have never seen the word eloquor in a piece of literature, it couldvery well exist, and it would mean to 'speak out'.Even more specifically, 'eloquent' would be formed from the present active participle "eloquens, eloquentis", meaning "speaking out"