Mortalize - Law Dictionary Search Results
Home Dictionary Name: mortalizeBills of mortality
Bills of mortality, returns of the deaths which occur within a certain district.It was with the view of communicating to the inhabitants of London, to the Court, and the constituted authorities of the city, accurate information respecting the increase or decrease in the number of deaths and the casualties of mortality occurring amongst them, that the bills of mortality were commenced in London after a visitation of the plague in 1592, but they were not continued uninterruptedly until the occurrence of another plague in 1603, from which period, up to the present time, they have been continued from week to week; excepting during the Great Fire, when the deaths of two or three weeks were given in one bill.In 1605, the parishes comprised within the bills of mortality included the 97 parishes within the walls, 16 parishes without the walls, and six contiguous out-parishes in Middlesex and Surrey.In 1626, the city of Westminster was included in the bills; in 1636, the parishes of Islington, ...
Mortally
In a mortal manner so as to cause death as mortally wounded...
Mortalness
Quality of being mortal mortality...
Mortality
Mortality. See BILLS OF MORTALITY....
Mortal
Subject to death destined to die as man is mortal...
Mortality
The condition or quality of being mortal subjection to death or to the necessity of dying...
Mortalize
To make mortal...
Parson mortal
Parson mortal [fr. persona mortalis, Lat.], a rector instituted and inducted for his own life. But any collegiate or conventual body, to whom a church was for ever appropriated, was termed persona immortalis, Jac. Law Dict....
Syllogism
Syllogism, the full logical from of a single argument. to a legitimate syllogism it is essential that there should be three, and no more than three, pro-positions-namely, the conclusion, or proposition to be proved, and two other propositions which together prove it, and which are called the premises. There must be three terms, viz., the subject and predicate of the conclusion, and another called the middle term, which must be found in both premises, since it is by means of it that the other two terms are to be connected together, e.g., all men are mortal; John is a man; therefore John is mortal. Consult Jevon's or Mill's or Bain's Logic....
deadly
Capable of causing death mortal fatal destructive certain or likely to cause death as a deadly blow or wound...
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