Viz. (also rendered viz without a period) and the adverb videlicet are used as synonyms for "namely", "that is to say", and "as follows".
Background
Viz. is an
abbreviation of videlicet, which itself is a
contraction from
Latin of "videre licet" meaning "it is permitted to see."
OEDThe New Fowler's Modern English Usage (revised third edition, 1998), pp. 825, 828.
American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language (fourth edition, 2000), p. 1917 Both forms introduce a specification or description of something stated earlier; this is often a list preceded by a colon (:). Although both forms survive in English, viz. is far more common than videlicet.
A similar expression is scilicet, abbreviated as sc., which is Latin for "it is permitted to know". Viz. is usually used to elaborate or detail text which precedes it, while sc. provides a parenthetic clarification, removes an ambiguity, or supplies a word omitted in preceding text. In legal usage, scilicet often appears abbreviated as SS. or § in a caption providing a statement of venue and is read as "to wit".
Black's Law Dictionary (sixth edition, 1990), p. 1403.
- Viz. is usually read aloud as "that is", "namely", or "to wit",AMHER (fourth edition, 2000), p. 1917. but is sometimes pronounced as /vɪz/.
- Scilicet can be read as "namely," "to wit," or "that is to say," or pronounced or .AMHER (fourth edition, 2000), p. 1560.
Etymology and original usage
Viz. is the medieval
scribal abbreviation for videlicet. It is the letters v and i followed by the common medieval Latin contraction for et and -et, which was a
glyph similar to the numeral 3 or the
Middle English letter
yogh (Ȝ) although it was not related to either.According to E. Cobham Brewer 1810–1897. Dictionary of Phrase and Fable, the same abbreviation mark was used for habet (hab3) and omnibus (omnib3).
Videlicet is a
contraction of Classical Latin vidēre licet, which meant "it may be seen, evidently, clearly" (vidēre, to see; licet, third person singular present tense of licēre, to be permitted). In Latin, videlicet was used to confirm a previous sentence or to state its contrary.
Examples
Notes
References
External links
This entry is from Wikipedia,the leading user-contributed encyclopedia. It may not have been reviewed by professional editors (See full disclaimer)