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Dubius

Dubius is a Latin adjective meaning doubtful, uncertain, or questionable. In classical and later Latin, it describes matters that are not clearly proven or decided, such as a dubius opinion or a dubius case. The term is used in both everyday and scholarly Latin to indicate ambiguity or lack of consensus.

Etymology and forms: Dubius comes from the verb dubitare, to doubt. It has gendered forms common to

Usage in modern contexts: In modern scholarly Latin, dubius continues to appear in academic writing to render

See also: The related adjective dubius ties to the noun dubium (doubt) and to the English cognate

In summary, dubius functions as a standard Latin descriptor for doubt and ambiguity, encountered in classical

second-declension
adjectives:
masculine
dubius,
feminine
dubia,
neuter
dubium.
In
phrases
or
constructions,
the
form
agrees
with
the
noun
it
modifies,
as
in
res
dubia
(a
doubtful
matter)
or
consultis
dubiis
(doubtful
matters).
the
sense
of
doubt
or
uncertainty.
The
phrase
in
dubio
pro
reo,
a
well-known
legal
maxim,
translates
to
“in
case
of
doubt,
for
the
accused.”
In
taxonomy,
Latin
epithets
such
as
dubius
are
occasionally
used
in
plant
or
animal
names
to
denote
uncertain
or
disputed
attribution,
though
such
usage
emphasizes
provenance
or
attribution
rather
than
a
characteristic
of
the
organism
itself.
dubious.
Phrases
such
as
res
dubia
and
in
dubio
pro
reo
are
common
Latin
expressions
encountered
in
legal,
philosophical,
and
scholarly
contexts.
texts
and
carried
into
modern
Latin
usage
in
legal
and
academic
settings.