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Everyday - Law Dictionary Search Results

Home Dictionary Name: everyday

Everyday

Used or fit for every day common usual as an everyday suit of clothes...


bank

bank : an organization for the custody, loan, or exchange of money, for the extension of credit, and for facilitating the transmission of funds branch bank : a banking facility that is a separate but dependent part of a chartered bank ;esp : a facility that performs some banking functions and is separate from a main office bridge bank : a national bank that is chartered for a limited time to operate an insolvent bank until it is sold central bank : a national bank that establishes monetary and fiscal policy and controls the money supply and interest rate collecting bank : a bank other than the payor bank that is handling for collection a negotiable instrument or a promise or order to pay money commercial bank : a bank organized chiefly to handle the everyday financial transactions of businesses (as through deposit accounts and commercial loans) cooperative bank : an association (as a credit union) owned by and offering banking services for its members ;specif : savings and ...


bellyacher

a person who complains habitually usually about everyday minor problems...


homey

having a feeling of home cozy and comfortable as the homey everyday atmosphere a restaurant with a homey atmosphere...


nonliterary

Characteristic of or appropriate to everyday language...


Impossible

Impossible, The word 'impossible' has not been used here in the sense of physical or literal impossibility. The performance of an act may not be literally impossible but it may be impracticable and useless from the point of view of the object and purpose which the parties had in view; and if an untoward event or change of circumstances totally upsets the very foundation upon which the parties rested their bargain, it can very well be said that the promisor finds it impossible to do the act which he promised to do, Satyabrata Ghose v. Mugneeram Bangur, AIR 1954 SC 44 (46). (Contract Act, 1872, s. 56)Means in the language of everyday life a thing is impossible when according to the ordinary course of human events, no expectation can be entertained that it will happen, Shephard v. Kottgen, (1877) 47 LJQB 67....


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