Talk:De jure
From Academic Kids
Does anyone else think it might be acceptable to infuse the wikipedia with a collection of case studies under a name such as "minimally de jure"? The collection would, of course, be of case studies and reigning theories in the optimizal minimalization of juridicity. Disciplines relevant though of course only peripherally (which is why most of the wikifications on this page are gratuitous and signal degrading...my apologies) would not be limited to accounting, actuarial science, labor economics and
Article title
This phrase is almost always written in English as "de jure". The article should be under that title. If the objection is that "J" isn't a Latin letter, then, instead of calling it a Latin phrase, we can say it's a phrased derived from Latin or a bastardization of Latin or whatever is technically correct. The fact remains, though, that "de jure" is the phrase commonly used in English (278,000 English hits on Google compared to 10,000 for "de iure"), it's the phrase people would almost always enter in a search, and it's the phrase that all the links point to. JamesMLane 04:22, 27 Feb 2005 (UTC)
- Agree. Everyking 05:38, 27 Feb 2005 (UTC)
No one having expressed a reason to have the article at "De iure", I've moved it back. JamesMLane 21:13, 1 Mar 2005 (UTC)
