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eo ipso

American  
[ey-oh ip-soh, ee-oh ip-soh] / ˈeɪ oʊ ˈɪp soʊ, ˈi oʊ ˈɪp soʊ /

adverb

Latin.
  1. by that very fact.


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

Initia aetatis Cremonae egit usque ad virilem togam, quam xv. anno natali suo accepit isdem illis consulibus iterum duobus quibus erat natus, evenitque ut eo ipso die Lucretius poeta decederet.

From The Student's Companion to Latin Authors by Middleton, George

With the change of the abode of the dead from inferno to heaven the two Cerberi are eo ipso also evicted.

From Cerberus, The Dog of Hades The History of an Idea by Bloomfield, Maurice

The dragon, I hold, is the personification of the life within the earth—of that life which, being unknown and uncontrollable, is eo ipso hostile to man.

From Old Calabria by Douglas, Norman

In modern times Law and Religion tend more and more to separate, and to speak of Judaism as Law eo ipso implies a divorce of Judaism from Religion.

From Judaism by Abrahams, Israel

A transcendent God is eo ipso not limited to such methods as we happen to have caught a glimpse or a whisper of.

From Problems of Immanence: studies critical and constructive by Warschauer, Joseph

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