Glossary entry

Latin term or phrase:

de facto

English translation:

de facto

Added to glossary by Sarah Ponting
Nov 12, 2003 11:42
21 yrs ago
25 viewers *
Latin term

de facto

Latin to English Law/Patents
legal text

Proposed translations

+3
1 min
Selected

de facto

Latin

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Note added at 2003-11-12 11:45:16 (GMT)
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de fac·to (dî fàk¹to, dâ) adverb
In reality or fact; actually.

adjective
1. Actual: de facto segregation.
2. Actually exercising power though not legally or officially established: a de facto government.

[Latin : dê, from, according to + facto, ablative of factum, fact.]

The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language
Peer comment(s):

agree Rowan Morrell
1 min
thanks, Rowan. I obviously agree with you and Mike too ;-)
agree Nikki Graham
4 mins
thanks, Nikki :-)
agree asil
1 hr
thanks :-)
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4 KudoZ points awarded for this answer.
+6
1 min

de facto

Oxford

de facto loc adj
a (de hecho) de facto

Mike :)
Peer comment(s):

agree Rowan Morrell
1 min
thank you, Rowan - Mike :)
agree Maria-Jose Pastor
2 hrs
agree Alicia Jordá
2 hrs
agree Ricardo Posada Ortiz : si
6 hrs
agree MLG
6 hrs
agree Simon Charass : All answers are correct, but in a legal text “de facto” is not translated.
6 days
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2 mins

de facto

We say the same thing in English. Means "actual" or "in reality".
Something went wrong...
6 hrs

in fact

could be that too
Depending on your context...
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