항목

  • Cui bono Cui bono, Cui bono?
    "Cui bono" 는 현대에 와서도 법률과 수사학에서 쓰이는 라틴어로 된 질문으로 누가 범죄의 동기가 있을 만한지 찾아내는 질문이다. 숨은 동기를 시사하거나 책임이 있는 사람이 반드시 처음에 나타나지는 않는다는 말로 쓰이는 격언이다. 이 어구는 배여격 구조를 지닌다. 또한 "cui prodest" ("누가 이익을 도모하는가...
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  • Cui bono
    Cui bono , literally "to whose benefit?", is a Latin phrase which is still in use as a key forensic question in legal and police investigation: finding out who has a motive for a crime. It is an adage that is used either to suggest a hidden motive or to indicate that the party responsible for som...
  • Cui クイ
    for Cancun Air, Mexico Concept unique identifier, an identifier that uniquely represents meaning in a time-invariant fashion in the Unified Medical Language System. See also Cui bono, "To whose benefit?", a Latin adage used to suggest a hidden motive Choi (Korean version of the Chinese surname...
  • 라틴어 법률 용어 목록 List of Latin legal terms, 法学のラテン語成句..
    의견일치) condicio sine qua non (Sine qua non, 씨네쿼넌, 인과관계 조건설) Contra proferentem (작성자 불이익의 원칙) Corpus delicti (구성요건) Cui bono(누구에게 이익이 되는가) Culpa in contrahendo (계약체결상의 과실책임) de facto (사실상) de jure (법률상) Habeas corpus (인신보호영장) Ius civile...
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  • Double dative
    salvation') expresses purpose while the dative of reference expresses the person or thing affected (sui, 'his [men]').The best known example is "Cui bono?" This phrase, taken from Cicero, is usually rendered in English as something like, "Who benefits?", or more literally 'To whose advantage...
  • Follow the money
    the political difficulty of investigating organized crime, saying "You follow drugs, you get drug addicts and drug dealers. But you start to follow the money, and you don't know where the fuck it's gonna take you". Cui bono, a Latin phrase meaning "To whose benefit?", suggesting a hidden motive
  • Appeal to motive 訴諸動機
    the referee's rulings. "My opponent argues on and on in favor of allowing that mall to be built in the center of town. What he won't tell you is that his daughter and her friends plan to shop there once it's open." Ad hominem Bulverism Conflict of interest Cui bono Race card Shooting the messenger
  • Lucius Cassius Longinus Ravilla
    Lucius Cornelius Cinna and in 125 BC he was elected censor. He was renowned for severity as a iudex and gained fame by formulating the question "Cui bono?" ("Good for whom?", or "Who benefits?") as a principle of criminal investigation.In 113 BC he was appointed special inquisitor in the case of...
  • Henry Cotton Henry Cotton (divine)
    of Obsolete Words in our Version of the Bible (Oxford, 1832). Five Books of Maccabees in English, with Notes and Illustrations (Oxford, 1832). Cui Bono? A Letter to the Right Hon. E. G. Stanley (Dublin, 1833). Fiat Justitia, a Letter to Sir H. Hardinge on the Present State of the Church in...
  • Arthur Clery
    Clery was a close friend of Tom Kettle (who died serving on active duty in Europe during World War I), with whom he founded a dining club, the "Cui Bono". Hugh Kennedy (later Chief Justice of the Irish Free State) was also a lifelong friend. The principal influence on Clery was the Irish Ireland...
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