Exposit - Law Dictionary Search Results
exposit
Matched in: Term exposit
Expositive
Serving to explain expository
Exposition
The act of exposing or laying open a setting out or displaying to public view
Keep your definitions linked to case research
Parliamentary exposition
Parliamentary exposition, means the legislature sets out, in a later Act or Statute, the exposition of an earlier Act or,
Statutory exposition
Statutory exposition. When the language of a statute is ambiguous, and any subsequent enactment involves a particular interpretation o the
Enarration
A detailed exposition relation
Exegesis
Exposition explanation especially a critical explanation of a text or portion of Scripture
VerbarMidrash
A talmudic exposition of the Hebrew law or of some part of it
Misexposition
Wrong exposition
A vinculo matrimonii
by its own direct words, since index animi sermo (language conveys the intention of the mind), and maledicta expositio qu' corrumpit textum (an exposition which corrupts the text is bad). [4 Rep. 35; Sussex Peerage Case, (1844)
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Exposit - Law Dictionary Search Results
exposit
Matched in: Term exposit
Expositive
Serving to explain expository
Exposition
The act of exposing or laying open a setting out or displaying to public view
Keep your definitions linked to case research
Parliamentary exposition
Parliamentary exposition, means the legislature sets out, in a later Act or Statute, the exposition of an earlier Act or,
Statutory exposition
Statutory exposition. When the language of a statute is ambiguous, and any subsequent enactment involves a particular interpretation o the
Enarration
A detailed exposition relation
Exegesis
Exposition explanation especially a critical explanation of a text or portion of Scripture
VerbarMidrash
A talmudic exposition of the Hebrew law or of some part of it
Misexposition
Wrong exposition
A vinculo matrimonii
by its own direct words, since index animi sermo (language conveys the intention of the mind), and maledicta expositio qu' corrumpit textum (an exposition which corrupts the text is bad). [4 Rep. 35; Sussex Peerage Case, (1844)
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