Repute - Law Dictionary Search Results
Cheating
act or omission causes or is likely to cause damage or harm to that, person in body mind, reputation or property, is said to 'cheat' in s. 415 of the IPC and the ingredients for the offence
testimony
testimony that presents an affirmative declaration of fact and is based on the personal knowledge of the testifier reputation testimony : testimony concerning a person's reputation among associates or in the community tes·ti·mo·ni·al [tes-tə-mō-nē-əl] adj tes·ti·mo·ni·al·ly adv
damage
from Latin damnum financial loss, fine] 1 : loss or harm resulting from injury to person, property, or reputation 2 pl : the money awarded to a party in a civil suit as reparation for the loss
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Disreputable
Not reputable of bad repute not in esteem dishonorable disgracing the reputation tending to bring into disesteem as it is disreputable to associate
Obliquy
(1) Abusive or defamatory langu-age (2) The state or condition of being ill spoken of disgrace or bad repute, Black's Law Dictionary, 7th Edn., p. 1104.
Name
woman, which is not lost by her divorce, and she can acquire another only by obtaining it by repute obliterating her name by marriage, see Fendall v. Goldsmid, (1877) 2 PD 263. As to retainer of a
Elecampane
flowers The root which has a pungent taste is used as a tonic and was formerly of much repute as a stomachic
Respectable
Worthy of respect fitted to awaken esteem deserving regard hence of good repute not mean as a respectable citizen
Parergon
the intervals of another; a subordinate task. 2. The title of a work on the Canons, in great repute, by Ayliffe.
Infamy
Infamy, means (1) Disgraceful repute (2) The loss of reputation or position resulting from a person's being convicted of an infamous crime, Black's
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Repute - Law Dictionary Search Results
Cheating
act or omission causes or is likely to cause damage or harm to that, person in body mind, reputation or property, is said to 'cheat' in s. 415 of the IPC and the ingredients for the offence
testimony
testimony that presents an affirmative declaration of fact and is based on the personal knowledge of the testifier reputation testimony : testimony concerning a person's reputation among associates or in the community tes·ti·mo·ni·al [tes-tə-mō-nē-əl] adj tes·ti·mo·ni·al·ly adv
damage
from Latin damnum financial loss, fine] 1 : loss or harm resulting from injury to person, property, or reputation 2 pl : the money awarded to a party in a civil suit as reparation for the loss
Keep your definitions linked to case research
Disreputable
Not reputable of bad repute not in esteem dishonorable disgracing the reputation tending to bring into disesteem as it is disreputable to associate
Obliquy
(1) Abusive or defamatory langu-age (2) The state or condition of being ill spoken of disgrace or bad repute, Black's Law Dictionary, 7th Edn., p. 1104.
Name
woman, which is not lost by her divorce, and she can acquire another only by obtaining it by repute obliterating her name by marriage, see Fendall v. Goldsmid, (1877) 2 PD 263. As to retainer of a
Elecampane
flowers The root which has a pungent taste is used as a tonic and was formerly of much repute as a stomachic
Respectable
Worthy of respect fitted to awaken esteem deserving regard hence of good repute not mean as a respectable citizen
Parergon
the intervals of another; a subordinate task. 2. The title of a work on the Canons, in great repute, by Ayliffe.
Infamy
Infamy, means (1) Disgraceful repute (2) The loss of reputation or position resulting from a person's being convicted of an infamous crime, Black's
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Try the research workspace - 7 days free