tacitly

  • 11tacitly — tac·it·ly …

    English syllables

  • 12tacitly — See: tacit …

    English dictionary

  • 13cattily — tacitly …

    Anagrams dictionary

  • 14tacit — tacitly, adv. tacitness, n. /tas it/, adj. 1. understood without being openly expressed; implied: tacit approval. 2. silent; saying nothing: a tacit partner. 3. unvoiced or unspoken: a tacit prayer. [1595 1605; < L tacitus silent, ptp. of tacere&#8230; …

    Universalium

  • 15tacite — Tacitly; silently; impliedly …

    Ballentine's law dictionary

  • 16A Defense of Abortion — is a moral philosophical paper by Judith Jarvis Thomson first published in 1971. Granting for the sake of argument that the fetus has a right to life, Thomson uses thought experiments to argue for the moral permissibility of induced abortion. Her …

    Wikipedia

  • 17South African contract law — is essentially a modernised version of the Roman Dutch law of contract, [1] which is itself rooted in Roman law. In the broadest definition, a contract is an agreement entered into by two or more parties with the serious intention of creating a&#8230; …

    Wikipedia

  • 18Postmodernist theory — Lyotard, Baudrillard and others Thomas Docherty INTRODUCTION Philosophy has been touched by postmodernism. Philosophy, in the modern academy, is supposed to be the discipline of disciplines: it is philosophy which will be able to gather together …

    History of philosophy

  • 19COMMUNITY — antiquity middle ages character and structures functions and duties individual centers the muslim caliphate in the east …

    Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • 20Social contract — This article is about the political and philosophical concept. For Rousseau s 1762 treatise on the concept, see The Social Contract. For other uses, see Social Contract (disambiguation). The social contract is an intellectual device intended to&#8230; …

    Wikipedia