(n.) A quadrangle or court, as of a prison; hence, a prison.
(v.) Quoth; said. See Quoth.
Example Sentences:
(1) "Quod Nihil Scitur" (That's that nothing we know) is a philosophical open, "adogmatic" and liberal form of scepticism.
(2) This aspect was once considered as a secondary feature in respect to the severity of prognosis quod vitam of the subjects affected with cancer, while now, with a significant increase of survival, it is preeminent that there be the possibility to offer these patients an acceptable quality of life under both physical and social profiles.
(3) This classification concerns the size and site of the intracerebral hematoma and the existence and degree of the intraventricular hemorrhage examined in 144 cases, with regard to the prognosis quod vitam et functionem.
(4) The results can be interpreted in the following terms, namely that women are more gravely endangered quod vitam in the presence of comparable accident injuries.
(5) The method is based on the application of an adaptive logical circuit (ADALINE) trained for the dichotomous prognostic classification of irradiated individuals quod vitam according to a set of clinical and laboratory indicators registered on the third day after irradiation.
(6) Prognostic "quod vitam" worsened while EF decreased, with a death rate of 33% in the sub-group with global EF less than 20%, and 28% considering those with EF below 30%.
(7) Quod erat demonstrandum : the court is constrained by the very people in the executive that it seeks to oversee.