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tácitos

Tácitos is the masculine plural form of the Spanish adjective tácito, meaning implicit or unspoken. It is used to describe things that are understood without being explicitly stated, such as acuerdos tácitos, normas tácitas (unwritten norms), or conocimientos tácitos (tacit knowledge). The feminine forms are tácita and tácitas, which are used with feminine nouns.

In usage, the term appears in law, sociology, linguistics, and philosophy to refer to understandings or knowledge

Etymologically, tácito derives from Latin tacitus, meaning silent, from tacere, to be silent. The term has been

See also: tacit, implicit, explicit, tacit consent, tacit knowledge, unspoken norms.

inferred
from
context
or
conduct
rather
than
from
direct
communication.
Examples
include
tacit
consent
(consentimiento
tácito)
in
certain
legal
or
historical
discussions,
or
tacit
norms
(normas
tácitas)
in
social
groups.
In
linguistics
and
cognitive
science,
tacit
knowledge
(conocimiento
tácito)
denotes
know-how
that
people
possess
but
may
not
be
able
to
fully
articulate.
The
concept
is
closely
associated
with
the
idea
of
implicature
and
with
how
social
and
cognitive
systems
function
beyond
explicit
rules.
integrated
into
Spanish
across
centuries
to
describe
implicit
meaning,
unspoken
agreements,
and
non-explicit
knowledge.