'this is not my deed'. In contract law, a party can avoid a contract on the grounds that what the contract actually entails is radically different from what they thought it was when they signed it.
it can only be used in very rare circumstances
Quod erat faciendum in Latin is "That which was to be done" in English.
The English equivalent of the Latin sentence 'Id quod factum est infectum esse potest' is the following: What has been made can be corrupted. The word-by-word translation is as follows: 'id quod' means 'what'; 'factum' means 'done, or made'; 'est' means '[he/she/it] has been'; 'esse' means 'to be'; and 'poteste' means 'power'. The word 'infectum' has a range of literal and extended meanings, from 'colored, dyed, imbued, stained, steeped, tinged' to 'corrupted, poisoned, tainted'.
This is verse 11 from chapter 12 of the Gospel of Mark; in the Vulgate version of the Bible, it's translated as "a Domino factum est istud et est mirabile in oculis nostris." (Literally, "a Domino factum est istud" is "this has been done [or made] by the Lord.")
Karl Gottfried Siebelis has written: 'Disputationes quinque, quibus periculum factum est ostendendi, in veterum ..'
non est = He or she or it is not
The name "John" comes from Hebrew Yohanan, which means "Yahweh has favored". The name came into Latin via Greek Ioannes, and appears in Latin as Joannes or Johannes.
bene factum
Non, Hanna Barbera est américain.
The Latin word for achievement is Factum. Factum is defined as a deed, accomplishment, work, act, or an achievement.
The English meaning of the Latin phrase 'factum probans' is Proving the fact. In the word-by-word translation, the noun 'factum' means 'fact'. The verb form 'probans' means 'proving'.
[He] is not dead.