? ipso facto ? because it is true.
The Ex Post Facto law is a law that can go backward and change the legal consequences. In Latin, it means "after the facts."
actual, real, existing, in reality
de facto segregation NOve NEt
The website thesaurus.reference.com says that absolutely, as a matter of fact, de facto, genuinely, in fact, in point of fact, in reality, in truth, indeed, literally, really, veritably, very are all synonyms of actually.
The term is used in situations where the law is changed, making a previously committed lawful act now unlawful. Sir Stuart Bell used the term "retrospectivity" to describe the Thomas Legg audit of MPs' expenses. Usually the terms ex post facto law or retroactive law are used
"Carpe"=Seize "Facto"=Facts "Carpe Facto"="seize the facts"
I think you mean ex post facto, which is latin for "after the fact" I think you mean ex post facto, which is latin for "after the fact"
jure power = legislation ;facto power=justice
It's fact
Ipso Facto
The words translate to mean 'in reality'. In this case it means existing but not legally recognised. For example, you may say he was Prime Minister, but de facto president of the country
De Facto - De Facto album - was created in 1999.
The phrase "IPSO Facto" means when translated into English the phrase "by the fact itself". This means that a direct phenomenon is a direct consequence of the action.
De facto means "in fact" or "in reality," even though it may not be officially recognized. It is often used to describe something that exists in practice but not necessarily by law. The term comes from Latin, where "de facto" translates to "concerning fact."
It means actually existing, especially without lawful authority
de facto means 'concerning fact' or 'in reality'. So de jure (concerning law) equality would mean equality in law (but not necessarily in fact) and de facto equality would mean equality in practice. A good real life example is race relations in the US. The 1965 Civil Rights Act ended de jure discrimination and inequality in America, but de facto discrimination and inequality persisted.
The English meaning of the Latin phrase 'de facto' is 'in' ['de'] 'fact' ['facto']. So the phrase 'de facto capital of the Caliphate' means the city that in fact serves as the capital city. The English meaning of the Latin phrase 'de jure' is 'in' ['de'] 'law' ['jure']. In this example, the city that the law recognizes as the capital isn't the city that actually fills the role.