Literate - Law Dictionary Search Results
Home Dictionary Name: literateLiterate
Literate, one who qualifies himself for holy orders by presenting himself as a person accomplished in classical learning, etc., not as a graduate of Oxford, Cambridge, etc....
Mirza
Mirza, is not a caste, but is only a term of respect which was used in old days for a literate person who did writing for Government or Private persons. It may easily be called the Persian counterpart of the word 'Babu' in Urdu, Wazir Ahmad v. Ghulam Hassan, 1945 Pesh 29....
Pardanashin lady
Pardanashin lady, means the women who, accord-ing to the customs, ought not to be compelled to appear in public, shall be exempt from personal appearance in court. [Code of Civil Procedure, 1989, s. 132]A lady who conducts herself male member by filing and complaints invarious courts and prosecuted them in a 'manly' manner and also meeting the petition writers, the lawyers coming to her way is not a pardanashin lady, Ghulam Zuhra v. Habla Begum, AIR 1985 J&K 22 (24). [Evidence Act, 1872, s. 111]A heavy onus has upon him who realise as upon the deed by a 'pardanashin woman' and it mustbe proved affirmatively and conclusively that the deed was not only executed by, but was explained to and really understood byher, Bhikary Ram v. Hedait Mohammad Sahaji, AIR 1985 Ori 62.A lady in a veil, normally worn by Muslim ladies as a customary dress.Pardanashin woman, is a woman of rank, Hindu or Mohammedan, who lives in seclusion shut in the Zanana and having no communication exceptfrom behind the p...
Lettered
Literate educated versed in literature...
Literate
Instructed in learning science or literature learned lettered...
Literacy
State of being literate...
Literalization
The act of literalizing reduction to a literal meaning...
Literalize
To make literal to interpret or put in practice according to the strict meaning of the words opposed to spiritualize as to literalize Scripture...
Literalness
The quality or state of being literal literal import...
Review literally and even judicially
Review literally and even judicially, means re-examination or reconsideration. Basic Philosophy inherent in it is the universal acceptance of human fallibility, S. Nagaraj v. State of Karnataka, (1993) Supp (4) SCC 595: 1994 SCC (L&S) 320: (1994) 26 ATC 448....
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