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What does "qua" mean in English? I cannot understand the meaning of such phrases like: "England qua Scotland" Does it mean " from England to Scotland"?
Jan 17, 2019 10:04 AM
Answers · 4
3
"qua" is a preposition mostly used by lawyers and scholars. Many people think it sounds pretentious. It means "meaning" or "in the role of". "If the president's father commits a crime, the president has conflicting responsibilities. Qua son, he should try to protect his father, but qua president, he should treat all citizens equally, and he should punish his father. " "Tom stared at the animal. He had always lived in the city, so this was the first time he had ever seen a cow qua cow, not just qua beef." People sometimes use "England" to mean "Britain". Since Scottish people live in Britain, but don't live in England, this makes them angry. If I said to a Scottish person, "What do you eat on special occasions in England?", he would reply "In 'England', qua Scotland, we eat haggis." Haggis is something Scottish people eat, but English people don't eat.
January 17, 2019
1
Do you have a full sentence? It is possibly a latin term added in (sometimes legal documents do this).
January 17, 2019
Thank you, Susan. I'm a bit confused too.
January 17, 2019
I am an english speaker and have never heard this expression before. Never ever..
January 17, 2019
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