Grammar: oratio recta, oratio obliqua, adverbium.
Latin phrases (law and medicine): alibi, modus operandi, in loco parentis, pro bono (publico), de facto, post mortem , rigor mortis, statim, locum tenens.
Grand review of all the Latin phrases.
8. Oratio Recta:
She thinks, “He is a good man.”
Oratio Obliqua:
She thinks him to be a good man.
9. Oratio Recta:
She thinks, “He is a good man.”
Oratio Obliqua:
She thinks him to be a good man.
(Scil., she thinks that he is a good man.)
10. Oratio Obliqua:
She considers him to be a good man.
She believes him to be a good man.
She discovers him to be a good man.
She finds him to be a good man.
She senses him to be a good man.
She understands him to be a good man.
She reports him to be a good man.
82. This lawyer usually charges
huge fees for her services,
but because of this case’s
grave constitutional implications,
she’s offered to do it pro bono.
85. Though the prime minister
was still theoretically
the head of the government,
the rebel commander
held so much actual power
that the latter was
the de facto leader of the country.
88. Although at the time of his death
he seemed to be suffering from
accidental food poisoning,
a post mortem investigation
showed he had actually
been killed with arsenic.