sensu stricto

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Translingual

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Etymology

From Latin sēnsū strictō (in the narrow sense).

Adverb

sensu stricto

  1. (sciences, academics) In a narrow sense of a polysemic word that may be used in narrower and broader senses.
    • 1849 Patrick Colquhoun: A Summary of the Roman Civil Law, Vol I part I. p364
      The patricians, then, sensu stricto, implied the old hereditary noble by birth; sensu lato, it included also the later noble by creation, properly, and sensu stricto termed ingenuus. In like manner, English heralds reckon four several qualities or degrees of gentility arising from a grant of coat armour. One who inherits a coat of arms from his father is styled a gentleman of birth; if he derive it from his grandfather, he is termed a gentleman of blood; and if he succeed to the same from his great-grandfather, or other more distant progenitor, he is entitled a gentleman of ancestry: if he obtain the grant himself, he is simply a gentleman of coat-armour.
    • 1885 John Austin ed Robert Campbell: Lectures on Jurisprudence or the Philosophy of Positive Law 5th edition Vol 2. p.852
      Droits réels is ambiguous, as sometimes denoting jura in rem, and sometimes jura in re (sensu stricto). This arises from the extension of jus in re to dominia, and of jus ad rem to obligationes or jura in personam.
      Difficulty: Where a thing is subject to a series of rights, – is subject to a series of vested rights (descendible perhaps from present vestees), or to contingent rights to determinate parties, existing or not.
      But the right of the occupant is not even inchoate. There is no specifically determinate party (existing or not) to take the right. It is nothing but a right that may accrue to everybody capable of taking, who may occupy.
  2. (taxonomy) In the narrow sense (of a taxon). Added after a taxon to mean the taxon is being used in the sense of the original author, or without taxa which may otherwise be associated with it.
    • Swedish, 1985, Svensk botanisk tidskrift, 79: 12
      Liliaceae sensu stricto är en i stort sett nordhe- misfärisk familj med centrum i Asien.
    • English, 1986, Wendy B. Zomlefer, Common Florida Angiosperm Families, volume 1, page 73
      Relevant to Florida species is Thorne's inclusion of the Agavaceae and Amaryllidaceae in the family. The Liliaceae sensu stricto have been defined as having actinomorphic flowers, six stamens, and most importantly, a superior ovary.
    • English, 2000, Arthur Jonathan Shaw, Bernard Goffinet (eds.) Bryophyte Biology, page 71
      Among the bryophytes, mosses (the Bryophyta sensu stricto) are the most speciose group, comprising approximately 10000 or more species.
    • Spanish, 2004, Ernesto Velázquez Montes, Rosa María Fonseca, Manual de Prácticas de Laboratorio: Briofitas, Pteridofitas y Gimnospermas, page 31
      División Bryophyta (Sensu stricto)
    • French, 2009, François Couplan, Le régal végétal: Plantes sauvages comestibles, page 76
      Celle-ci (Liliaceae sensu stricto) est principalement une source de plantes ornementales.
    • Russian, 2010, А.С. Захаров, "Налоговое право ЕС" page 79
      Похоже, что Суд ЕС действительно учитывал эту пропорциональность sensu stricto как в решении по делу Marks & Spencer2, так и в решении по делу N3.

Synonyms

Antonyms

Derived terms

References

English

Phrase

sensu stricto

  1. Synonym of stricto sensu

Anagrams

Latin

Etymology

Ablative case of sēnsus (sense) and strictus (tight, close).

Pronunciation

Adverb

sēnsū strictō (not comparable)

  1. In the narrow sense; narrowly.

Antonyms

Polish

Etymology

Unadapted borrowing from Latin sēnsū strictō.

Pronunciation

Adverb

sensu stricto (not comparable)

  1. sensu stricto (in the narrow sense)
    Synonyms: dokładnie, stricte, ściśle

Further reading