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Alea iacta est

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Alea iacta est (also seen as alea jacta est) is Latin for "The die has been cast".

Actually quoted by Suetonius as iacta alea est [ˈjakta ˈaːlɛa ɛst], it is what Julius Caesar is reported to have said on January 10, 49 BC as he led his army across the River Rubicon in northern Italy. With this step, he rejected the Senate's authority and began his long civil war against Pompey and the Optimates.

The phrase is still used today to mean that events have passed a point of no return, i.e., he cannot take back what he has done, much like the gambler who has wagered everything on a throw of the dice. Caesar was said to have borrowed the phrase from Menander, his favorite Greek writer of comedy.

By some accounts, Caesar used the imperative "iaci" rather than the passive "iacta est" ("Cast the die!").[citation needed] In another context, jacta est could be translated as "was cast, i.e., as a "simple past." It is generally assumed, e.g. by Shakespeare, that Caesar here meant "The die has been cast" i.e., "The die is now cast" and not "The die was cast."

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