ídem
101idem est scire aut scire debere aut potuisse — /aydam est sayriy 6t sayriy dabiriy 6t potuwisiy/ To be bound to know or to be able to know is the same as to know …
102idem semper antecedenti proximo refertur — /aydam sempar sentasadentay proksamow rafartar/ The same is always referred to its next antecedent …
103Idem agens et patiens esse non potest — A person cannot at the same time be the person acting and the person acted upon. Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen v Barnhill, 214 Ala 565, 108 So 456, 47 ALR 270, 281 …
104Idem est facere, et nolle prohibere cum possis — It is the same thing to do a thing as not to prohibit it when you can …
105Idem est nihil dicere et insufficienter dicere — It is the same thing to say nothing as not to say enough …
106Idem est non probari et non esse; non deficit jus sed probatio — A thing is the same when not proved as when non existent; the law is not lacking, but the proof is …
107Idem est scire aut scire debet aut potuisse — To know, to be bound to know and to be able to know, are all the same thing …
108Idem non esse est non apparere — Not to exist is the same thing as not to appear. The maxim applies to a purchaser, without notice of an unrecorded deed. Neslin v Wells Fargo & Co. (US) 14 Otto 428, 439, 26 L Ed 802, 806 …
109idem quod — The same as …
110idem sonans — |īˌdemˈsōˌnanz, |iˌdemˈsōˌnän(t)s Etymology: Latin : having the same sound used of a rule in law that the occurrence in a document of a spelling of a material word that is wrong but has the sound of the word intended (as Lawrance for Lawrence or… …