Sentence examples for an idem from inspiring English sources

The phrase "an idem" is not correct and usable in written English.
The term "idem" is a Latin word meaning "the same" and is typically used in academic or legal contexts to refer to a previously mentioned source or item.
Example: "In the following citation, I will refer to the same author as idem."
Alternatives: "the same" or "the aforementioned".

Exact(1)

Last week Ms. Reid skippered an Idem in a race -- just as her great-grandparents had done.

Similar(59)

Because a self has both an idem-identity and an ipse-identity, it inhabits two irreducible orders of causality, namely, the physical and the intentional orders.

The constitutive features of any narrative form the basis for Ricoeur to hold that personal identity, itself constituted by an idem-identity and an ipse-identity, always involves a narrative identity.

In this way participation in democratic institutions "must make [persons] very different beings, in range of ideas and development of faculties, from those who have done nothing in their lives but drive a quill, or sell goods over a counter" (Idem).

They approve of the new minister for equal opportunities, and for sport, Josefa Idem, an Olympic gold medallist born in Germany but now a naturalised Italian.

CANOE Josefa Idem, a 47-year-old Italian competing in the women's 500-meter kayak singles final, is the first woman to compete in eight Olympics.

On the industrial side, IFIL bought ArjoWiggins, a French company that is the world leader in paper for bank notes and securities, and Idem, a British specialist in carbon-free copying paper.

Moreover, one of the aims of ConGenOmics is to "promote development of adequate conservation management programmes for endangered species at a European scale" (Idem, 7).

Idem, a light-flooded industrial printing shop in Montparnasse that opened in 1880, was where Paris' lithography renaissance took place, with Matisse, Chagall, Picasso and Miró using the printing stones and inkpots.

We consider three stochastic landscape dynamics: (i) the population is subject to repetitive bottlenecks, (ii) to the repeated alternation of fragmentation and fusion of demes with a constant population carrying capacity, (iii) idem with a variable carrying capacity.

vHowever Henry Shue's approach is distinctive, since he considers a right to participation also as a basic right, see idem pp. 65-87.

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