Noun
defacto (plural defactos)
Alternative form of de facto
Palestinian terrorism has to be rejected and condemned, yes. But it should not be translated defacto into a policy of support for a really increasingly brutal repression, colonial settlements and a new wall. Zbigniew Brzezinski
But they basically canceled one of the two semifinals and made the other semifinal the defacto final. Source: Internet
He cited provisions of the party constitution which designates the Party leader as the defacto political spokesperson, and political supreme on pronouncements by the party. Source: Internet
But a single cross-platform, cross-service standard ratified by the W3C will mean that many more sites and services will be able to kill the password as the defacto login method. Source: Internet
Armstrong and Johnsson, who were the defacto leaders from the start, had hard core, predetermined views from the outset. Source: Internet
“ I am glad though, that finally the association is taking action against a defacto leader, who in every executive wants to dictate what must be, and should not be done,” Llewellyn stated. Source: Internet