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Joining Together - Law Dictionary Search Results

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Joining together

Joining together, the expression 'joining together' in paragraph 16(1) is apparently used in its broad meaning. According to the Webster's New World Dictionary, 1962 Edn. Page 789 the word 'join' has these meanings. '(1) to place together, bring to-gether, connect, pass on, combine; (2) to make into one, unite; (3) to become a part or a member of; enter into association with; (4) to go to and combine with; (5) to enter into the company of' a company; (6) to go and take one's proper place in.' The word has evidently got several meanings. When it is used in the sense of 'combine', it may imply mingling together of things, often with a loss of distinction of elements that completely merge with one another, Ramashankar Kaushik v. Election Commission of India, AIR 1974 SC 445: (1974) 1 SCC 271. [Election Symbols (Reservations and Allot-ment Order, 1968, Para. 16(1)]There is nothing in the context to restrict its meaning to a case of merger of two or more political parties and their resultan...


join

join 1 : to unite so as to form one unit [ the claims in one action] 2 a : to align oneself with esp. in a legal matter [she ed her husband as plaintiff] b : to cause or order (a person) to become a party to a lawsuit [if the person has not been so ed, the court shall order that the person be made a party "Federal Rules of Civil Procedure Rule 19(a)"] compare consolidate, implead, interplead, intervene c : to enter into or participate in [ the suit] vi 1 : to come together so as to form a unit [the other victims of the scheme ed in the suit] 2 : to commence involvement or participation [if the person should as a plaintiff but refuses to do so, the person may be made a defendant, or…an involuntary plaintiff "Federal Rules of Civil Procedure Rule 19(a)"] join·able adj join issue or join the issue 1 : to accept, fix on, or clearly define an issue as the subject of a legal dispute [refused to join issue by filing an answer with the court] 2 : to take an opposed p...


Join

To be contiguous close or in contact to come together to unite to mingle to form a union as the bones of the skull join two rivers join...


Coagmentation

The act of joining or the state of being joined together union...


Deed-poll

Deed-poll, a single deed in the form of a manifesto or declaration to all the world of the grantor's act and intention. If there be no recital it usually speaks in the first person, but where recitals are introduced it speaks in the third person. See DEED.A deed poll is a deed made by and expressing the active intention of one party only, or made by two or more persons joining together in expressing a common active intention of them all. A deed poll is so called because the parchment required for such deeds has usually been shared even which evidences some act or agreement between them other than the mere consent to join in expressing the same active intention on the part of all. An indenture derives its name from the fact that the parchment on which such a deed was written was indented or cut with a waving or indented line at the top. Co Litt 229, Halsbury's Laws of England 13, para 3, p. 5....


consolidate

consolidate -dat·ed -dat·ing : to join together into one whole: as a : to combine (two or more lawsuits or matters that involve a common question of law or fact) into one compare class action NOTE: Consolidation of matters in the federal courts is governed by Rule 42 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. Consolidated cases may become one single action with a single judgment, or may retain their individual identities although tried together. The court may also try one representative case and render a judgment binding on the other cases. b : to combine (two or more corporations) to form one new corporation compare merger con·sol·i·da·tion [kən-sÄ -lə-dā-shən] n ...


Bivalve

A mollusk having a shell consisting of two lateral plates or valves joined together by an elastic ligament at the hinge which is usually strengthened by prominences called teeth The shell is closed by the contraction of two transverse muscles attached to the inner surface as in the clam or by one as in the oyster See Mollusca...


Coagment

To join together...


coalesced

joined together into a whole...


Conjoin

To join together to unite...


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