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politicii

Politicii is not a standard English term; it is encountered mainly as an inflected form in Latin and in some Romance-language texts, where it relates to politics or policy. The root polit- comes from Greek polis, via Latin politicus, and it denotes matters of public life, governance, and policy.

In Latin-language writing, the everyday word for politics is res politicae. However, medieval and later Latin

In Romance languages, cognate terms appear with meanings tied to politics or policy. For example, in languages

In modern usage, Politicii can function as a proper name in fiction or as a stylistic title,

See also: politics, policy, political philosophy, Latin grammar, Romance-language etymology.

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authors
sometimes
use
forms
built
on
the
politicus
stem
as
part
of
larger
phrases;
politicii
may
appear
as
a
possessive
or
adjectival
form
depending
on
the
syntactic
context.
It
is
not
widely
listed
as
a
separate
term
in
classical
Latin
dictionaries.
that
inherited
the
Latin
polit-
family,
inflected
forms
shaped
by
gender
and
case
may
resemble
politicii
within
longer
noun
phrases.
The
precise
meaning
thus
depends
on
context
and
grammar.
and
may
appear
in
scholarly
works
when
quoting
or
translating
phrases
that
use
the
polit-
stem.
It
should
be
read
according
to
the
surrounding
syntax
rather
than
assumed
to
have
a
fixed,
standalone
definition
in
English.