cui bono

English

Etymology

From Cicero’s Pro Sexto Roscio Amerino, 84 & 86: Latin cui bonō fuisset (to whom it would have benefited), a so-called double dative construction.

Noun

cui bono (uncountable)

  1. The principle that the ultimate initiator of an action is likely the person who stands to gain from the action.
    • 1900, Evelyn Shuckburgh, Letters to Atticus, translation of original by Marcus Tullius Cicero:
      If the principle of cui bono is applied, it is evident that the gainers were the party of the triumvirs, whose popularity would be increased by a belief being created that their opponents the Optimates were prepared to adopt extreme measures to get rid of them.

Synonyms

Further reading

Portuguese

Etymology

Borrowed from Latin cui bonō.

Phrase

cui bono?

  1. who benefits? who profits?; cui bono
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