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Refuse - Law Dictionary Search Results

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Ancient law

Ancient law, uniformly refuse to dispense with a single gesture, however, grotesque, with a single syllable, however its meaning may have been

Ambassador

IV. in 1835, in the case of Lord Durham as ambassador to St. Petersburg. The Sovereign can also refuse to receive an ambassador accredited to him. See Chit. Stat., tit. 'Ambassadors.

Abdicate

Abdicate [fr. abdico, Lat.], to renounce or refuse anything, Termes de la Ley. In the civil law, to disinherit.

Keep your definitions linked to case research

Shoddy

A fibrous material obtained by ldquodevilingrdquo or tearing into fibers refuse woolen goods old stockings rags druggets etc See Mungo

Confirmation of Bishop

It was undecided, from1848 to 1902, whether this ceremony be ministerial or judicial, i.e., whether the archbishop can refuse to confirm. See Queen v. Archbishop of Canterbury, (1848) 11 QB 483, in which the Court of four

Sewage

The contents of a sewer or drain refuse liquids or matter carried off by sewers

Scavenger

scraping or sweeping and carrying off the filth The name is also applied to any animal which devours refuse carrion or anything injurious to health

Roller coaster

It is a popular amusement at many amusement parks but is sufficiently frightening to some people that they refuse to ride in one

Renounce

To declare against to reject or decline formally to refuse to own or acknowledge as belonging to one to disclaim as to renounce a title to land or

VerbarRaskolnik

of their variance from orthodox beliefs and observances as follows I ldquoMost obnoxiousrdquo the Judaizers the Molokane who refuse to recognize civil authority or to take oaths the Dukhobortsy or Dukhobors who are communistic marry without ceremony

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Try the research workspace - 7 days free


Refuse - Law Dictionary Search Results

Research workspace

Save terms and build your research trail

A free trial unlocks notes, tags, search history, and the full AI Studio desk for judgment research.

Ancient law

Ancient law, uniformly refuse to dispense with a single gesture, however, grotesque, with a single syllable, however its meaning may have been

Ambassador

IV. in 1835, in the case of Lord Durham as ambassador to St. Petersburg. The Sovereign can also refuse to receive an ambassador accredited to him. See Chit. Stat., tit. 'Ambassadors.

Abdicate

Abdicate [fr. abdico, Lat.], to renounce or refuse anything, Termes de la Ley. In the civil law, to disinherit.

Keep your definitions linked to case research

Shoddy

A fibrous material obtained by ldquodevilingrdquo or tearing into fibers refuse woolen goods old stockings rags druggets etc See Mungo

Confirmation of Bishop

It was undecided, from1848 to 1902, whether this ceremony be ministerial or judicial, i.e., whether the archbishop can refuse to confirm. See Queen v. Archbishop of Canterbury, (1848) 11 QB 483, in which the Court of four

Sewage

The contents of a sewer or drain refuse liquids or matter carried off by sewers

Scavenger

scraping or sweeping and carrying off the filth The name is also applied to any animal which devours refuse carrion or anything injurious to health

Roller coaster

It is a popular amusement at many amusement parks but is sufficiently frightening to some people that they refuse to ride in one

Renounce

To declare against to reject or decline formally to refuse to own or acknowledge as belonging to one to disclaim as to renounce a title to land or

VerbarRaskolnik

of their variance from orthodox beliefs and observances as follows I ldquoMost obnoxiousrdquo the Judaizers the Molokane who refuse to recognize civil authority or to take oaths the Dukhobortsy or Dukhobors who are communistic marry without ceremony

  • Last »

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