Fas

/fæs/ noun

Definition

In Roman law and religion, divine law or what is sanctioned by the gods, as opposed to human law. Also an abbreviation for various organizations or technical terms.

Etymology

From Latin 'fas' meaning 'divine law, what is right according to the gods'. Related to 'fari' (to speak), suggesting divinely spoken law. Contrasted with 'jus' (human law) in Roman legal tradition.

Kelly Says

The Roman concept of 'fas' reveals a fascinating distinction between human-made laws and divine commandments - what humans decree versus what the gods ordain. This ancient legal concept helps explain why we still struggle with questions of natural law versus positive law in modern jurisprudence.

Translations

AMአማርኛ
ፋስ
fas
ARالعربية
فاس
fās
BNবাংলা
ফাস
phās
CACatalà
fas
fas
CSČeština
fas
fas
DADansk
fas
fas
DEDeutsch
Fas
fas
ELΕλληνικά
φάς
fás
ESEspañol
fas
fas
FAفارسی
فاس
fās
FISuomi
fas
fas
FRFrançais
fas
fas
GUGU
ફાસ
phās
HAHA
fas
fas
HEעברית
פאס
fas
HIहिन्दी
फ़स
fas
HUMagyar
fas
fas
IDBahasa Indonesia
fas
fas
IGIG
fas
fas
ITItaliano
fas
fas
KKKK
фас
fas
KMKM
ហ្វាស
phās
MRMR
फास
phās
MSBahasa Melayu
fas
fas
MYမြန်မာ
ဖက်စ်
phèt
NLNederlands
fas
fas
NONorsk
fas
fas
PAPA
ਫਾਸ
phās
PLPolski
fas
fas
PTPortuguês
fas
fas
RORomână
fas
fas
RUРусский
фас
fas
SVSvenska
fas
fas
SWKiswahili
fas
fas
TAதமிழ்
ஃபாஸ்
phās
TEతెలుగు
ఫాస్
phās
THไทย
ฟาส
fāt
TLTL
fas
fas
TRTürkçe
fas
fas
UKУкраїнська
фас
fas
URاردو
فاس
fās
VITiếng Việt
fas
fas
YOYO
fás
fás
ZUZU
ifasi
íːfásí

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