I don't know the answer to your question exactly, but the Latin stet is used often to mean that if something has been crossed out it should be uncrossed out. The word means 'let it stand'.
oxidation
The most obvious one is N-Game, which is about a ninja who believes in N, thus N-Game..
Starting at the top and going counter clockwise, each blue line or eye is the letter I. Thus indivisibili_ _. You could google those letters and one word matches.
The letters can be used to spell the 5 letter words hoots, hunts, shoot, shout, south and toons. They also spell the 4 letter words hoot, hots, hunt, huts, nuts, onto, oohs, outs, shot, shut, soon, stun, thou, thus, toon and unto.
The three "God Cards" were released as promotional material and tie-ins to the television show. They have nonstandard frames, no printed abilities, nonstandard creature types, and unusable ATK/DEF. The intuitive answer is that they don't have printed abilities and thus can't be processed properly during a game. The hard answer is that they are just not game-legal cards and are thus invalid in tournament play. The result of this is that the card has no value in either a serious or casual game, and is thus worthless. Winged Dragon of Ra has had a game-legal print too, and it is also fairly worthless due to being hard to summon and not very useful.
There is none. Sic = thus (but nothing more) Sic stat = Thus is stands
Thus it stands = Sic stat
Sic is the Latin "thus."
itaque stat -- or 'thus, he/she/it stands'
Thus it stands = Sic stat
You mean sic, but in fact that means just "thus". If you wanted to say "thus it stands" in Latin you'd say sic stat.
Sic stat.
Sic stat.
This it stands = Sic statLet it stand (used in proofreading, editing) = Stet
Sic 'Sic' means simply 'thus.' If you really want 'Thus it stands,' that's 'Sic stat.'
> there by In Latin, "sic stat," or even simply "sic." By the way, in editing, the word "stet," which means "let it stand" in Latin, indicates that a word or section marked for deletion should stay in as originally written.
The English phrase 'Thus it stands' is a translation of the Latin words 'Sic stet', which is used in editing and proofing manuscripts. For example, proofreaders accidentally may cross out a word or passage. In reproofing, they make a dotted line under the crossed out word or phrase. In the margin, they write 'stet', which is the Latin word for '[it] stands'. This comment alerts all those subsequently involved in preparing the manuscript to keep the word or phrase within the text. Proofreaders and editors use stet, Latin for "let it stand," to indicate that the usage or spelling in question is not to be "corrected." Authors use sic, Latin for "thus," to indicate that the usage or spelling in question is intentional.Sic or stet There is no one word in Latin for 'Thus it stands'. 'Sic' means 'thus' - nothing more. 'Stet' means 'Let it stand' - that's used in proofreading. To say 'Thus it stands' in Latin is: Sic stat. There isn't one. The word 'sic' simply means 'thus'. To say 'thus it stands' is 'sic stat'.