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 | Aug 17, 2012This week's theme Latin terms in English This week's words corpus delicti ex officio ne plus ultra ex post facto cui bono This week's comments AWADmail 529 Next week's theme Slang  Discuss  Feedback  RSS/XML             A.Word.A.Daywith Anu Garg cui bono
 PRONUNCIATION: MEANING: 
noun: To whose benefit?
 ETYMOLOGY: 
From Latin, literally, to whose advantage? Earliest documented use: 1604.
 NOTES: 
Cui bono is the idea that the responsibility for an act can
usually be determined by asking who stands to gain as a result of the
act. It's first recorded in a speech by Cicero attributing it to the
Roman consul Lucius Cassius. If he were speaking today he would say:
Follow the money.
 USAGE: 
"Cui bono? Surprise, surprise, it's the banks." Carol Hunt; Debt Would Be a Release Next to This Travesty; Irish Independent (Dublin, Ireland); Jan 29, 2012. A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:The epitaph that I would write for history would say: I conceal nothing. It is not enough not to lie. One should strive not to lie in a negative sense by remaining silent. -Leo Tolstoy, novelist and philosopher (1828-1910) | 
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