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tacet
[ tah-ket, tas-it, tey-sit ]
verb (imperative)
- be silent (directing an instrument or voice not to play or sing).
tacet
/ ˈtæs-; ˈteɪsɛt /
verb
- intr (on a musical score) a direction indicating that a particular instrument or singer does not take part in a movement or part of a movement
Word History and Origins
Origin of tacet1
Word History and Origins
Origin of tacet1
Example Sentences
He could also have alerted his readers to another critical Latin insight appropriate for these times: Qui tacet, consentire videtur.
According to his memoir, it was in childhood that he invented an imaginary companion or alter ego named George Tacet.
In the book there’s a lofty, curmudgeonly character called Tacet, whom Taylor invented todiscuss issues he didn’t want to raise directly; and in conversation he can be evasive.
It highlights statesman-poet More’s famous defense of that humane legal maxim, “Qui tacet consentire videtur”: “He who is silent should be understood to consent.”
Qui tacet consentire is Latin for, “Silence gives consent.”
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