mutatis mutandis - определение. Что такое mutatis mutandis
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Что (кто) такое mutatis mutandis - определение


Mutatis mutandis         
MEDIEVAL LATIN PHRASE
Mutatis mutandi; Mutatis Mutandis; Mutandis mutatis
Mutatis mutandis is a Medieval Latin phrase meaning "with things changed that should be changed" or "once the necessary changes have been made". It remains unnaturalized in English and is therefore usually italicized in writing.
mutatis mutandis         
MEDIEVAL LATIN PHRASE
Mutatis mutandi; Mutatis Mutandis; Mutandis mutatis
[mu:?t?:t?s mu:'tand?s, mju:-, -i:s]
¦ adverb (used when comparing two or more cases) making necessary alterations while not affecting the main point.
Origin
L., lit. 'things being changed that have to be changed'.
Примеры употребления для mutatis mutandis
1. He used the Latin phrase mutatis mutandis (with all due adjustments having been made) in a one–paragraph memo about the style of invitations for the counsel‘s office Christmas party.
2. He used the Latin phrase mutatis mutandis – with all due adjustments or modifications having been made‘‘ – in a one–paragraph memo about the style of invitations for the counsel‘s office Christmas party.
3. He used the Latin phrase mutatis mutandis _ "with all due adjustments or modifications having been made" _ in a one–paragraph memo about the style of invitations for the counsel‘s office Christmas party.
4. One of the discoveries in the sociology of religion in the last 25 years has been the extent to which, mutatis mutandis, patterns of religious allegiance in a pluralist society resemble those of consumption in the marketplace.