Difference between revisions of "User:Lily Brustkern/Notepad/effectus vs. affectus"
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# In gen., execution, accomplishment, performance | # In gen., execution, accomplishment, performance | ||
# In partic., with reference to the result of an action, an operation, effect, tendency, purpose | # In partic., with reference to the result of an action, an operation, effect, tendency, purpose | ||
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affectus (adf-), ūs, m. [afficio]. | affectus (adf-), ūs, m. [afficio]. | ||
Latest revision as of 09:55, 22 June 2026
| Note title | effectus vs. affectus |
|---|---|
| Page(s) link(s) | Editing Page:FC 1042.djvu/359 |
effectus, ūs, m. [efficio], a doing, effecting.
- In gen., execution, accomplishment, performance
- In partic., with reference to the result of an action, an operation, effect, tendency, purpose
affectus (adf-), ūs, m. [afficio].
- A state of body, and esp. of mind produced in one by some influence (cf. affectio, I.), a state or disposition of mind, affection, mood
- Love, desire, fondness, good-will, compassion, sympathy
The substitution takes place in the prepositional phrase, originally: ex proprio effectu, meaning something like, "from one's own accomplishment. After the substitution, we have ex proprio affectu, meaning "from one's own disposition/goodwill".
References