The Fifth Amendment of the United States Constitution states that a person may not be forced to incriminate himself . To take the fifth, means that you want to use that right. Taking the fifth, may not be used as an admission of guilt.
"Taking the fifth" or "pleading the fifth" means invoking the protection of the Fifth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution--the one that guarantees us the right not to incriminate ourselves. As a witness on the witness stand in court, you can refuse to answer a question if you think the answer might put you in a bad spot with respect to the law. The Wikipedia article on the Fith Amendment (link below) says this: "The Fifth Amendment protects witnesses from being forced to incriminate themselves. To 'plead the fifth' is a refusal to answer a question because the response could form self incriminating evidence."
Invoking the Fifth Amendment of the Constitution, which provides protection from self-incrimination. It means you do not have to answer a question, if you feel it may incriminate (make you appear guilty) you.
The fifth amendment was ratified in 1791.
The Fifth amendment. "To plead the fifth"
"Plie" is pronounced as "plee-ay" in ballet terminology.
"Yu plee dung dai shuddai" is a phrase in Jamaican Patois that translates to "You please don't die yet" in English. It is a way of expressing concern for someone's well-being and wishing them good health and longevity.
On a map
Short a, schwa, long e, accent on the first syllable PAN - uh - plee
knee tea tee key he me sea see
Plié [plee-AY] Bent, bending.
Do you mean what does it mean to plead the fifth? This would refer to your fifth amendment right not to say anything that would be self-incrementing.
how to pronounce nafplio is just how it sounds (naf-PLEE-yo)
You mean when was- it was the 5th of this month.
In a sequence, the one after the fourth.Fifth is an ordinal number. It means the number five item in a series."A fifth" can mean one of five equal parts of the whole. It can also mean a fifth of a gallon of whiskey.
The singular complicata and the plural complicatein the feminine and the singular complicato and the plural complicati in the masculine are literal Italian equivalents of the English word "complicated." Context makes clear whether the audience of one (cases 1, 3) or more (examples 2, 4) is female or feminine (instances 1, 2), male or masculine (options 3, 4) or mixed female and male (sample 4). The respective pronunciations will be "KOM-plee-KA-ta" or "KOM-plee-KA-tey" in the feminine and "KOM-plee-KA-to" or "KOM-plee-KA-tee" in the masculine in Pisan Italian.
Assuming you mean her fifth single, that would be Bad Romance.