Glossary entry (derived from question below)
Spanish term or phrase:
antes citada
English translation:
Aforementioned
Added to glossary by
Gad Kohenov
Jun 6, 2008 12:49
15 yrs ago
19 viewers *
Spanish term
antes citada
Spanish to English
Law/Patents
Law: Patents, Trademarks, Copyright
trademarks
This may be a dead obvious one, but it is in a legal document...so I am not entirely comfortable with this.
Por otra parte, según la jurisprudencia del Tribunal de Justicia, el riesgo de confusión es tanto más elevado cuanto mayor resulta ser el carácter distintivo de la marca anterior (sentencia SABEL, antes citada, apartado 24).
Is there an abbreviation in English for this?
Thank you!
Liz Askew
Por otra parte, según la jurisprudencia del Tribunal de Justicia, el riesgo de confusión es tanto más elevado cuanto mayor resulta ser el carácter distintivo de la marca anterior (sentencia SABEL, antes citada, apartado 24).
Is there an abbreviation in English for this?
Thank you!
Liz Askew
Proposed translations
(English)
4 +13 | Aforementioned | Gad Kohenov |
4 +3 | cited above | Elizabeth Medina |
5 +2 | Op. cit. | Laureana Pavon |
5 | mentioned above, previously | Yamila Sosa |
5 | the aforesaid | Maria Gustafson |
3 +1 | supra | Tatty |
Change log
Jun 6, 2008 19:55: Gad Kohenov Created KOG entry
Proposed translations
+13
2 mins
Selected
Aforementioned
The usual English legal term in such cases.
--------------------------------------------------
Note added at 3 hrs (2008-06-06 16:28:54 GMT)
--------------------------------------------------
Op. cit. Is more common for books etc. cited by academicians.
I see it a lot in academic articles I have to translate.
--------------------------------------------------
Note added at 3 hrs (2008-06-06 16:28:54 GMT)
--------------------------------------------------
Op. cit. Is more common for books etc. cited by academicians.
I see it a lot in academic articles I have to translate.
Peer comment(s):
agree |
Ross Andrew Parker
1 min
|
!mil gracias!!
|
|
agree |
anelape
6 mins
|
!Mil gracias!
|
|
agree |
RichardDeegan
: or above-indicated
10 mins
|
!Mil gracias!
|
|
agree |
FFeNiXx
11 mins
|
!Mil gracias!
|
|
agree |
Ma. Fernanda Blesa
14 mins
|
!mil gracias!!
|
|
agree |
María T. Vargas
23 mins
|
!Mil gracias!!
|
|
agree |
Reed James
: I hereby concur with the aforementioned answer.
24 mins
|
!Mil gracias!
|
|
agree |
Victoria Porter-Burns
:
26 mins
|
!Mil gracias!
|
|
agree |
Lisa McCarthy
: It's got to be!
33 mins
|
! Mil gracias!
|
|
agree |
Nelida Kreer
: Absolutely.
34 mins
|
!Mil gracias!
|
|
agree |
Edward Tully
1 hr
|
!mil gracias!!
|
|
agree |
Salloz
1 hr
|
!Mil gracias!
|
|
agree |
Denise Nahigian
3 hrs
|
Thanks a lot!
|
|
agree |
Robert Copeland
3 hrs
|
Many thanks!
|
|
disagree |
jack_speak
: not in a legal context. Supra is more accurate, I think.
5 hrs
|
4 KudoZ points awarded for this answer.
Comment: "I had already put this in my translation as soon as you suggested it, but just wondered whether there was a nice abbv.
Thank you!"
+3
4 mins
cited above
This is my choice.
Note from asker:
I think this could work too..thank you! |
Peer comment(s):
agree |
Patricia Silva
3 mins
|
Thanks patri_2911.
|
|
agree |
RichardDeegan
: close -or above-indicated
9 mins
|
Right. Thanks Richard.
|
|
neutral |
FFeNiXx
: good answer, but i think this would depend on where section 24 is located in the document. If it isn't on the same page it may be confusing for the reader
11 mins
|
Correct. Thanks again.
|
|
agree |
Jorge Altamirano
12 mins
|
Thank you Jorge.
|
+2
17 mins
Op. cit.
"Op. cit. (Latin, short for "opus citatum"/"opere citato," meaning "the work cited/from the cited work") is the term used to provide an endnote or footnote citation to refer the reader to an earlier citation. To find the Op. cit. source, one has to look at the previous footnotes or general references section to find the relevant author.
In legal citation, the phrase refers to the cited source immediately previous to the last cited source."
In legal citation, the phrase refers to the cited source immediately previous to the last cited source."
Reference:
Peer comment(s):
agree |
Henry Hinds
: This is the abbreviation.
1 hr
|
Thanks Henry
|
|
agree |
Ana Dubra
2 hrs
|
Gracias Ana
|
21 mins
mentioned above, previously
"Aforementioned" is an alternative, but it is an adjective, so in that case it would be said: in the aforementioned SABEL ...
1 hr
the aforesaid
I'm an expert in Legal issues
Example sentence:
Due to the aforesaid, the parties shall...
Reference:
+1
1 hr
supra
You can use this too, but I prefer above-mentioned, then aforementioned.
Note from asker:
I will remember this one for the future! I have had to send off the translation now. Thanks! |
sup. supra above supra cit. supra citato cited above strictly speaking though "antes" - before |
Peer comment(s):
agree |
jack_speak
: Definately: "see Merrills, supra note 9, at 91 et seq" ( http://www.ejil.org/journal/Vol9/No4/sr2-01.html )
3 hrs
|
Thanks!
|
Discussion
DOC]
Joint Second Winning Article
File Format: Microsoft Word - View as HTML
Puma/SABEL judgment, para 22-24. 42. Paragraphs 24-25. 43. Paragraph 26. 44. Cfr supra p.6-8. 45. Van Bunnen ‘Exit le risque d’association - Retour au ...
www.union-eu.com/union/WebObjects/union.woa/wa/downloadDocu... - Similar pages
so it looks as though "supra" is fine here. I shall use this in future!