A. shifts to the defendant
The term 'res ipsa loquitur' is a latin phrase that is used in the court of law to describe when a person has been harmed by negligence. The phrase literally means "the thing speaks for itself". Or in other words it is evident that a person was harmed by another failing to use caution or being careless.
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'.
Latin topics are very interesting to write on.
res ipsa loquitur
He speaks from a twist of the thing itself
This literally means, "It (thing) speaks for itself" or it is self evident, explanatory
res ipsa loquitur - the thing (matter ) explains itself. It is self evident. respondeat [superior]: let [the master] answer - the employer is liable for the actions of an employee
In Continental law, the concept similar to res ipsa loquitor is known as "onus probandi" or "inversed burden of proof." This principle shifts the burden of proof to the defendant when certain facts are established, implying negligence or fault. However, the application and scope of this concept may vary among different Continental legal systems.
Most likely, a misspelling of loquitur, which means "he/she/it speaks" in Latin, as in Res ipsa loquitur - a legal term meaning the thing itself speaks or that the thing or circumstance itself is obvious and requires no further proof. If you drop a barrel of flour onto someone from a second story window and he dies, his family doesn't have to further prove that your barrel and therefore your negligence killed him ( the original case was just such a claim)
In the normal course of events, the accident wouldn't have happened if reasonable care had been used.
My name is Ipsa and it means :Desire, in sanskritWHOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO IPSA ROCKSSS!!!xxooxx
Neil Rodney Cameron has written: 'Res ipsa loquitur' -- subject(s): Dissertations, Res ipsa loquitur doctrine, University of Toronto, University of Toronto. Faculty of Law