mutatis mutandis

 
Pronunciation: /muːˌtɑːtɪs muːˈtandɪs, mjuː-, -iːs/

adverb

  • (used when comparing two or more cases or situations) making necessary alterations while not affecting the main point at issue: what is true of undergraduate teaching in England is equally true, mutatis mutandis, of American graduate schools

Origin:

Latin, literally 'things being changed that have to be changed'