I've never seen that in a document. There are borrowed Latin words in some legal documents (but not all), as all words in English came from other languages. Most of the long words came from Latin or Greek. Most of the short ones came from Germanic languages, such as Norse. I have studied both Latin and German, by the way. And I worked in a very large law firm for a couple of decades. So I know what I'm talking about. As opposed to you.
I've never seen that in a document. There are borrowed Latin words in some legal documents (but not all), as all words in English came from other languages. Most of the long words came from Latin or Greek. Most of the short ones came from Germanic languages, such as Norse. I have studied both Latin and German, by the way. And I worked in a very large law firm for a couple of decades. So I know what I'm talking about. As opposed to you.
I did read the article, and you are wrong. Did you even read what I wrote?
Maybe you really are illiterate.
"Eat shit." There is no trace of any kind of Latin in that sentence. Both words come from Old Norse. You don't know what "modern English" is.