qui
qui
From Latin qui, quibus (Dative-Ablative Plural) "who, which," a word often found in legal documents where quibbling is a fine art. "Qui" comes from PIE *kwo- with various endings. In the Germanic languages, the initial [k] regularly became [h], giving us "who," "where" [hwer], "why" [hwI], "whether," among others. In the Slavic languages the *kw reduced to a simple [k], to which accrued various suffixes, resulting in pronouns like kto "who," kogda "when," kuda "where" in Russian and other languages.1
ki
ke
ce kas i
2 fra. ceux qui
(ân/kas-ân )i ke
+
fra. ... qui les bras, qui les jambes : yak dasthâ, yak pâhâ
qui
waspada
ei incumbit probatio, qui dicit, non qui negat Lat.
بار اثبات دعوي بر عهده مدعي است نه بر منکر ادعا، البينه علي المدعي
probandi necessitas incumbit illi qui agit Lat.
بار اثبات ادعا بر عهده مدعي است (البينه علي المدعي)
qui sentit commodum sentire debt et onus Lat.
کسي که از مالي بهره مي برد خسارت هم به عهده اوست ("من له الغنم فعليه الغرم")
qui
pron 1) inter. kim?, kimi?; ~ est-ce? bu kimdir?; ~ vient? kim gəlir? 2) relat. hansı ki; l'homme ~ vient gələn adam