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Showing results for mutatis mutandis. Search instead for mutatis+mutandis.
Definitions

mutatis mutandis

[moo-tah-tees moo-tahn-dees, myoo-tey-tis myoo-tan-dis] / muˈtɑ tis muˈtɑn dis, myuˈteɪ tɪs myuˈtæn dɪs /


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

He said, mutatis mutandis, that if you want to write, find a nice place, sit down in peace and quiet and forget about seeking out brilliant thoughts.

From Scientific American • Oct. 6, 2023

That sentence, mutatis mutandis, could have been written about India, where Islamic invasions and British rule still produced an anxiety about authenticity — what was one’s own, what had come from outside.

From New York Times • Nov. 11, 2021

But they are in fact the same thing, mutatis mutandis.

From Salon • Nov. 22, 2015

Whether perhaps all these epithets would not, mutatis mutandis, have to be applied also to Ethics and Sociology, if these are to do their full work, he does not say.

From Hegel's Philosophy of Mind by Hegel, Georg Wilhelm Friedrich

These things, mutatis mutandis, have subsequently been reproduced, in various combinations and in milder forms, throughout the whole civilized world.

From Essays on the Materialistic Conception of History by Labriola, Antonio




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