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Rout - Law Dictionary Search Results

Home Dictionary Name: rout Page: 2 Page 2 of about 44 results (0.002 seconds)

Rabble rout

A tumultuous crowd a rabble a noisy throng...


Discomfit

To scatter in fight to put to rout to defeat...


Profligation

Defeat rout overthrow...


Disrout

To put to rout...


Assembly, Unlawful

Assembly, Unlawful, a meeting of three or more persons to do an unlawful Act, 3 Inst. 9; 1 Hawk. 155. See OFFENCE; RIOT; ROUT...


Rout cake

A kind of rich sweet cake made for routs or evening parties...


Rout

To roar to bellow to snort to snore loudly...


Unlawful assembly

Unlawful assembly, an assembly of five or more persons is designated an 'unlawful assembly', if the common object of the persons composing that assembly is:First.-To overawe by criminal force, or show of criminal force, the Central or any State Govern-ment or Parliament or the Legislature of any State, or any public servant in the exercise of the lawful power of such public servant; orSecond.-To resist the execution of any law, or of any legal process; orThird.-To commit any mischief of criminal trespass, or other offence; orFourth.-By means of criminal force, or show of criminal force, to any person to take or obtain possession of any property, or to deprive any person of the enjoyment of a right of way, or of the use of water or other incorporeal right of which he is in possession or enjoyment, or to enforce any right of supposed right; orFifth.-By means of criminal force, or show of criminal force, to compel any person to do what he is not legally bound to do, or to omit to do what ...


Revel rout

Tumultuous festivity revelry...


Highway

Highway, means a National Highway declared as such under s. 2 of the National Highway Act, 1956 (48 of 1956) and includes any Expressway or Express Highway vested in the Central Government, whether surfaced or unsurfaced, and also includes:(i) all lands appurtenant to the Highway, whether demarcated or not, acquired for the purpose of the Highway or transferred for such purpose by the State Government to the Central Government;(ii) all bridges, culverts, tunnels, causeways, carriageways and other structures constructed on or across such Highway; and(iii) all trees, railings, fences, posts, paths, signs, signals, kilometre stone and other Highway accessories and materials on such Highways. [Control of National Highways (Land and Traffic) Act, 2002 (13 of 2003), s. 2(e)]1. Broadly, any main route on land, on water, or in air2. Jain Public road connecting towns or cities, Black's Law Dictionary, 7th Edn., p. 734....



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