Declaratively - Law Dictionary Search Results
To state
To state, 'to state' is to declare or to set forth, especially in a precise, formal or authoritative manner; to say (something), especially in an
Sedition
meetings of more than fifty persons within one mile of Westminster Hall, except for parliamentary election purposes, are declared unlawful on any day on which Parliament is sitting. By s. 25 of the Act of 1817, and
Public meeting
section, he may if requested so to do by the chairman of the meeting, require that person to declare to him immediately his name and address and, if that person refuses or fails so to declare his
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Profess
Profess, means to avow publicly; to make an open declaration of ....... To declare one's belief in, Webster's New Word Dictionary. The word 'profess' in the Presidential Order
Power
Ch D 499. So far as they relate to land, powers are either (1) Common Law authori-ties; (2) declarations, or directions, operating only on the conscience of the persons in whom the legal interest is vested; or
Letters-patent, or letters overt
or sent by post to, the Patent Office in the prescribed manner. (3) The application must contain a declaration to the effect that the applicant is in possession of an invention, whereof he, or in the case
King
1931, shall extend to a dominion as part of the law of that dominion unless it is expressly declared in that Act that the dominion has requested, and consented to, the enactment thereof. The King has all
Includes
things as they signify according to their nature and import but also those thing which the interpretation clause declares that they shall include, Scientific Engg. House (P) Ltd. v. C.I.T., (1986) 1 SCC 11: 1986 SCC (Tax)
Extent
Extent, the peculiar remedy to recover debts of record due to the Crown; it differs from an ordinary writ of execution at the suit of a subject, because under it the body, lands, and goods of...
Plea
Plea [fr. plee, Fr.]. this was the name of a defendant's answer of fact to a plaintiff's declaration; anciently a suit or action. Pleas were divided into common pleas, relating to civil causes, and pleas of
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Declaratively - Law Dictionary Search Results
To state
To state, 'to state' is to declare or to set forth, especially in a precise, formal or authoritative manner; to say (something), especially in an
Sedition
meetings of more than fifty persons within one mile of Westminster Hall, except for parliamentary election purposes, are declared unlawful on any day on which Parliament is sitting. By s. 25 of the Act of 1817, and
Public meeting
section, he may if requested so to do by the chairman of the meeting, require that person to declare to him immediately his name and address and, if that person refuses or fails so to declare his
Keep your definitions linked to case research
Profess
Profess, means to avow publicly; to make an open declaration of ....... To declare one's belief in, Webster's New Word Dictionary. The word 'profess' in the Presidential Order
Power
Ch D 499. So far as they relate to land, powers are either (1) Common Law authori-ties; (2) declarations, or directions, operating only on the conscience of the persons in whom the legal interest is vested; or
Letters-patent, or letters overt
or sent by post to, the Patent Office in the prescribed manner. (3) The application must contain a declaration to the effect that the applicant is in possession of an invention, whereof he, or in the case
King
1931, shall extend to a dominion as part of the law of that dominion unless it is expressly declared in that Act that the dominion has requested, and consented to, the enactment thereof. The King has all
Includes
things as they signify according to their nature and import but also those thing which the interpretation clause declares that they shall include, Scientific Engg. House (P) Ltd. v. C.I.T., (1986) 1 SCC 11: 1986 SCC (Tax)
Extent
Extent, the peculiar remedy to recover debts of record due to the Crown; it differs from an ordinary writ of execution at the suit of a subject, because under it the body, lands, and goods of...
Plea
Plea [fr. plee, Fr.]. this was the name of a defendant's answer of fact to a plaintiff's declaration; anciently a suit or action. Pleas were divided into common pleas, relating to civil causes, and pleas of
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