English edit

Etymology edit

From Latin prīmā (first) faciē (shape, figure), literally “at the first appearance.”

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prima facie (comparative more prima facie, superlative most prima facie)

  1. (law) At first sight; on the face of it.
    • 1871, Gail Hamilton, Gala-days, page 191:
      [] the nicest young man that ever was, — daintily gloved, patently booted, oilily curled, snowily wristbanded, with a lovely cambric (prima facie) handkerchief bound about his hyacinthine locks and polished hat.
    • 1916 April 8, The National Provisioner, volume 54, number 15, page 36, column 2:
      Prima facie this may not read like a true story.

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Adjective edit

prima facie (not comparable)

  1. (law) Apparently correct; not needing proof unless evidence to the contrary is shown.

Usage notes edit

In common usage, often used to mean that the conclusion is obvious. In more narrow legal usage, it means rather that there is a case to answer – that the question is clear, but the conclusion is not necessarily obvious. See also Wikipedia at Prima facie: res ipsa loquitur and Res ipsa loquitur: contrast to prima facie.

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Adverb edit

prima facie

  1. (law) prima facie

Further reading edit