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Mitigation - Law Dictionary Search Results

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Ayurvedic, Siddha or Unani drug

internal or external use for or in the diagnosis, treatment, mitigation or prevention of disease or disorder in human beings or

Capital offences

of Sir Samuel Romilly, the severity of the law was mitigated by rapid steps in this respect. Larceny in a dwelling-house

Paregoric

Mitigating assuaging or soothing pain as paregoric elixir

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parkinsonism

degeneration of the cells producing that agent It can be mitigated by chemotherapy with agents such as levodopa 3 hydroxy L

Refrigeratory

Mitigating heat cooling

Battered Woman's syndrome

not imminent; Battered Woman's syndrome is also used as a mitigating factor in sentencing, Webster's Dictionary of Law, Indian Edn. (2005),

Beset

section in the case of a trade dispute has been mitigated by s. 2 of the (English) Trade Disputes Act, 1906

Natural justice

supposed distinction between quasi-judicial and administrative decisions, which was perceptibly mitigated in Dr. Bina Pani Dei case, [(1967) 2 SCR 625:

Contingent legacy

the gift would not vest within the period has been mitigated by s. 163 of the (English) L.P. Act, 1925, which

Equity

the ordinary tribunals afford, it by no means either controls, mitigates, or supersedes the Common Law, but rather guides itself by

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