The Latin equivalent of the sentence 'Thus it stands' is Sic stat. In the word-by-word translation, the adverb 'sic' means 'thus. The verb 'stat' means '[he/she/it] stands'. The term is used by editors and proof readers to indicate that something that has been changed or identified as deletable needs to go through in its original, uncorrected form.
Thus it stands = Sic stat
itaque stat -- or 'thus, he/she/it stands'
Thus it stands = Sic stat
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.
There is none. Sic = thus (but nothing more) Sic stat = Thus is stands
> 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.
Sic is the Latin "thus."
Sic 'Sic' means simply 'thus.' If you really want 'Thus it stands,' that's 'Sic stat.'
This it stands = Sic statLet it stand (used in proofreading, editing) = Stet
"Cis"
H in chemistry stands for hydrogen. In Physics is stands for Planck's Constant In measurement it stands for hecto~ ( prefix meaning 100)
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