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Facto

Facto is a Latin-derived term that appears most often in English in the fixed phrases de facto and ipso facto. In these compounds, facto signals a relationship to fact or reality rather than to law, status, or formal designation. Outside these phrases, facto is not commonly used as an independent English word, and may be encountered mainly in scholarly or legal contexts as part of these established expressions.

Facto comes from the Latin facere "to do" with its past participles and related forms; the exact

De facto describes situations that exist in practice, whether or not they are legally recognized. Examples

See also: de facto, ipso facto, de jure.

morphological
form
is
tied
to
Latin
grammar.
It
participates
in
the
set
phrases
de
facto
(in
fact,
in
reality)
and
ipso
facto
(by
the
fact
itself).
include
a
de
facto
leader
or
a
de
facto
standard.
Ipso
facto
indicates
a
consequence
that
follows
directly
from
a
fact;
for
instance,
"If
a
person
fails
the
exam,
they
are
ipso
facto
ineligible."
In
formal
usage,
these
phrases
are
commonly
treated
as
fixed
expressions
and
may
be
set
in
italics
in
some
style
guides.