indicium
indicium (in-dish-ee-[schwa]m), n. [Latin] Roman law. 1. The act of providing evidence against an accused. 2. The act of promising recompense for a certain service. 3. A sign or mark; esp., something used as a type of proof. See INDICARE.
indicium (in-dish-ee-[schwa]m), n. [Latin] Roman law. 1. The act of providing evidence against an accused. 2. The act of promising recompense for a certain service. 3. A sign or mark; esp., something used as a type of proof. See INDICARE.
indicare (in-di-kair-ee), vb. [Latin] 1. Roman law. To accuse (someone) of a crime; to provide evidence against someone. 2. Civil law. To show or discover. 3. Civil law. To fix or tell the price of a thing. See INDICIUM.
indicia n. (1)indicium之复数 (2)标记;象征;表明事实可能存在的情况 其存在可导致某种结论,在罗马法中大致相当于情况证据〔circumstantial evidence〕。