SIC


'''Sic''' is a Latin word, originally ''sicut'' [1] meaning "thus", "so", or "just as that". In writing, it is placed within square brackets and usually italicized — [''sic''] — to indicate that an incorrect or unusual spelling, phrase, punctuation, and/or other preceding quoted material has been reproduced from the quoted original and is not a transcription error.[2]

Contents
Overview
Derivation
References
See also

Overview


The word ''sic'' may be used either to show that an uncommon or archaic usage is reported faithfully: for instance, quoting the U.S. Constitution:
:The House of Representatives shall chuse [''sic''] their Speaker...
or to highlight an error, often for the purpose of ridicule or irony, as in this example:
:Warehouse has been around for 30 years and has 263 stores, suggesting a large fan base. The chain sums up its appeal thus: “styley [sic], confident, sexy, glamorous, edgy, clean and individual, with it's [sic] finger on the fashion pulse.”[3]
If text containing a quote is itself quoted in a third text, it may not be possible for a reader to tell whether any "[''sic'']" in the inner quote was added by the writer of the second text or the writer of the third text, or whether the anomaly highlighted was introduced by the first writer or the second.
The word ''sic'' is sometimes erroneously thought to be an acronym from any of a vast number of phrases such as "spelling is correct", "same in copy", "spelled incorrectly", "said in context", or "sans intention comique" (French: without comic intent). These "backronyms" are all false etymologies.[4]

Derivation


In the Italo-Western Romance languages it was the basis for their word for "yes": ''sí'' (Spanish), ''sim'' (Portuguese), ''sì'' (Italian), ''si'' (French for "yes, on the contrary").
Medieval Latin sometimes used ''sic'' as "yes", reflecting the Romance usage.

References


1. Truss, Lynne (2003), ''Eats, Shoots and Leaves,'' p163. London: Profile Books, 2003. ISBN 1-86197-612-7
2. The Columbia Guide to Standard American English., , Kenneth G., Wilson, Columbia University Press, 1993,
3. Chain reaction: Warehouse Anne Ashworth
4. What does (sic) mean?

See also



Sic semper tyrannis

Sic transit gloria mundi

List of Latin phrases

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Sic Companies
Below is the list of travel companies in Sic we have in our travel directory