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Paired with quo, in reference to the phrase quid pro quo(“this for that”): something offered in exchange for something else.
1886 May 19, Report from the Select Committee of the House of Lords on the Electric Lighting Act (1882) Amendment (No. 1) Bill ; the Electric Lighting Act (1882) Amendment (No. 2) Bill ; Together with the Proceedings of the Committee, Minutes of Evidence, and Appendix, London: Henry Hansard and Son, page 208:
[…]; but what is the quo for which they ought to give the quid? you say they ought to give a quid pro quo; what is the quo?[…]; did not they give you a pretty handsome quid for the quo there?
2000, Andrew Stark, Conflict of Interest in American Public Life, →ISBN, pages 163–164:
Indeed, asymmetry precludes the possibility of pointing to any particular quo that is meant to recompense the quid. […]If there exists any kind of inequity between quid and quo, then—on this line of argument—the expansive category of “friendship” emerges to account for it, siphoning the situation away from the class of objectionable quid pro quo. The claim officials here make—that for a quid to have a quo there must be some equivalency between the two—draws theoretical sustenance from the objective, exclusionary approach that critics of classical contract law apply to disproportionate exchanges.
2009, George G. Brenkert, Tom L. Beaucham, editors, The Oxford Handbook of Business Ethics, Oxford University Press, page 504:
Corruption, the Court declared in Buckley v. Valeo, involves a quid pro quo: an officeholder doing something in office in return for money or some other favor provided by another individual or entity (for our purposes, a corporation). The problem, however, is that in principle there can be a quid—the money or favor offered by the business to the official—and a quo—the action taken by the official that benefits the business—without any clear evidence of a pro, that is, that the two are connected.[…]The “pro,” the connection between quid and quo, might take place only inside the minds of the official and businessperson concerned.
Totes les lucubracions, interpretacions, acumulacions, que s'havien fet al seu propòsit en llarga corrua de segles de cristianisme, més que aclarar-li la grandesa i profunditat d'aquelles vides, li les enterbolia. Ell maldava per despullar-ho tot d'aquella inútil fullaraca i trobar-ne el quid simplicíssim. Maria havia vingut a donar exemple d'humilitat; Jesucrist, a predicar justícia.
All the meditations, interpretations, accumulations which had been made on this proposition in the long course of centuries of Christianity, rather than clarifying for him the greatness and profundity of these lives, had clouded them. He made an effort to clear away all the rubbish and find in it the very simple gist. Mary had come to give an example of humility; Jesus Christ, to preach justice.
Pompeius, Commentum in Artis Donati partem tertiam Keil, GL V, p. 287/14 = Zago (2017), p. 16/7:
(discussing moetacism) Plērumque enim aut suspēnsiōne prōnuntiātur aut exclūsiōneNōs quid sequī dēbēmus? Quid, per suspēnsiōnem tantum modo. Quā ratiōne? Quia si
It's mostly pronounced either by pausing or by leaving it outWhich solution should we adopt? Why, only by pausing. What is the reason? Because if
“quid”, in Charlton T. Lewis and Charles Short (1879) A Latin Dictionary, Oxford: Clarendon Press
“quid”, in Charlton T. Lewis (1891) An Elementary Latin Dictionary, New York: Harper & Brothers
quid in Gaffiot, Félix (1934) Dictionnaire illustré latin-français, Hachette.
Carl Meißner, Henry William Auden (1894) Latin Phrase-Book, London: Macmillan and Co.
(ambiguous) if anything should happen to me; if I die: si quid (humanitus) mihi accidat or acciderit
(ambiguous) what will become of him: quid illo fiet?
(ambiguous) what am I to do with this fellow: quid huic homini (also hoc homine) faciam?
(ambiguous) how came it that...: quid causae fuit cur...?
(ambiguous) what is the use of: quid attinet? with Infin.
(ambiguous) give me your opinion: dic quid sentias
(ambiguous) I am undecided..: incertus sum, quid consilii capiam
(ambiguous) what do you mean to do: quid tibi vis?
(ambiguous) what is the meaning of this: quid hoc sibi vult?
(ambiguous) what is the meaning of this: quid hoc rei est?
(ambiguous) to determine the nature and constitution of the subject under discussion: constituere, quid et quale sit, de quo disputetur
(ambiguous) what is the meaning, the original sense of this word: quid significat, sonat haec vox?
(ambiguous) what do we mean by 'virtue': quid est virtus?
(ambiguous) what sort of humour are you in: quid tibi animi est?
(ambiguous) what will become of me: quid (de) me fiet? (Ter. Heaut. 4. 3. 37)
(ambiguous) how are you: quid agis?
(ambiguous) what is going on? how are you getting on: quid agitur? quid fit?
(ambiguous) let the consuls take measures for the protection of the state: videant or dent operam consules, ne quid res publica detrimenti capiat (Catil. 1. 2. 4)
(ambiguous) what is your opinion: quid censes? quid tibi videtur?
(ambiguous) what is your opinion: quid de ea re fieri placet?
(ambiguous) to say the least..: ne (quid) gravius dicam
(ambiguous) in short; to be brief: ne multa, quid plura? sed quid opus est plura?
(ambiguous) no wonder: nec mirum, minime mirum (id quidem), quid mirum?