terminus a quo
Học thuậtThân thiện
Definition
Noun: * Earliest limiting point: The starting point or initial boundary of a period, event, or process. It marks the earliest possible time or date from which something is considered to begin.
Usage
- The term terminus a quo is used in formal, academic, or legal contexts to specify the absolute beginning of a timeframe or a condition.
- It is often contrasted with its counterpart, (the final limiting point or endpoint).
- It functions as a noun phrase, typically serving as the subject or object of a sentence.
Examples
- The signing of the treaty serves as the terminus a quo for the new era of diplomatic relations.
- Historians debated the terminus a quo of the Renaissance period.
- The contract clearly defines the terminus a quo for the commencement of services.
Advanced Usage
- In logic and argumentation, a terminus a quo can refer to the foundational premise or starting assumption from which reasoning proceeds.
- In textual criticism, it can denote the earliest possible date for the composition of a manuscript, based on internal evidence.
Variants and Related Words
- Terminus ad quem (noun): The final limiting point; the latest possible date or endpoint.
- Starting point (noun): A more common, less formal synonym.
- Commencement (noun): The beginning of something.
- Inception (noun): The establishment or starting point of an institution or activity.
Synonyms
- Starting point
- Commencement
- Inception
- Outset
- Beginning
- Point of departure
Antonyms
- Terminus ad quem
- Endpoint
- Conclusion
- Termination
- Finish
Notes
- Terminus a quo is a Latin phrase adopted into English. It is often italicized in formal writing ().
- Its usage is specialized and not common in everyday conversation.
Noun
- earliest limiting point