Viz.

Viz. (also rendered viz without a period) and the adverb videlicet are used as synonyms for "namely", "that is to say", and "as follows".

Contents

Etymology

Viz. is the medieval scribal abbreviation for videlicet; it specifically uses a Tironian abbreviation. It comprises the letters v and i followed by [1][note 1], the common medieval Latin contraction for et and -et. It has been included in Unicode since version 5.1. The glyph for "and" is the only other Tironian abbreviation remaining in use.

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.

Usage

Viz. is an abbreviation of videlicet, which itself is a contraction from Latin of "videre licet" meaning "it is permitted to see."[2][3][4] 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.

In contradistinction to i.e. and e.g., viz. is used to indicate a detailed description of something stated before, and when it precedes a list of group members, it implies (near) completeness.

A similar expression is scilicet, abbreviated as sc., which is Latin for "it is permitted to know". Sc. provides a parenthetic clarification, removes an ambiguity, or supplies a word omitted in preceding text,  while viz. is usually used to elaborate or detail text which precedes it. In legal usage, scilicet appears abbreviated as ss. or, in a caption, as §, where it provides a statement of venue and is read as "to wit".[6] Scilicet can be read as "namely," "to wit," or "that is to say," or pronounced /ˈsɪlɨsɛt/ or /ˈsklɨkɛt/.[7]

Examples

References

  1. ^ Brewer, Ebenezer (1970). Brewer's Dictionary of Phrase and Fable. New York: Harper & Row. p. 1132. 
  2. ^ OED
  3. ^ The New Fowler's Modern English Usage (revised third edition, 1998), pp. 825, 828.
  4. ^ American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language (fourth edition, 2000), p. 1917
  5. ^ a b AMHER (fourth edition, 2000), p. 1917.
  6. ^ Black's Law Dictionary (sixth edition, 1990), p. 1403.
  7. ^ AMHER (fourth edition, 2000), p. 1560.
  8. ^ The Autobiography of Benjamin Franklin at Project Gutenberg.

Notes

  1. ^ According to E. Cobham Brewer (1810–1897), Brewer's Dictionary of Phrase and Fable, the same abbreviation mark was used for "habet" and "omnibus".