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Home Dictionary Name: student Page: 4 Page 4 of about 107 results (0.002 seconds)Educated unemployed youth
Educated unemployed youth, the expression 'educated unemployed youth' has definite legal connotation. It denotes a class of citizens who after completing their education are faced with unemployment. Rule 223 (2) read with the note embodies a rule of preference. The question of grant of preference under the note beneath R. 223(2) can only arise when other conditions as regards suitability of the rival tenderers is equal. A student still undergoing his studies in a university be regarded as having completed his education or being 'unemployed' youth. When a person is still pursuing his course of studies in a university, there is no basis for treating him as an 'educated unemployed youth', Bishnu Ram Bohrah v. Parag Saikia, AIR 1984 SC 898 (904): (1984) 2 SCC 488. [Assam Excise Rules, 1945, R. 223]...
Jurisinceptor
Jurisinceptor, a student of the Civil Law....
Laureate or laureat
Laureate or laureat. [fr. lauera, Lat.] an officer of the household of the sovereign, whose business formerly consisted only in composing an ode annually, on the sovereign's birthday, and on the new year; sometimes also, though rarely, on occasion of any remarkable victory, Warton's Hist. of English Poetry. The annual birthday ode has been discontinued for many years. the title is derived from the circumstance that in classical times and in the Middle Ages the most distinguished poets were solemnly crowned with laurel. From this the practice found its way into our universities; and it is for that reason that Selden, in his Titles of Honour, speaks of the laurel crown as an ensign of the degree of mastership in poetry. A relic of the old university practice of crowning distinguished student of poetry exists in the term 'Laureation,' which is still used at one of the Scotch Universities (St. Andrews), to signify the taking of the degree of Master of Arts....
Main streaming
Main streaming, the practice of educating a disabled student in a class with students who are not disabled, in a regular-education setting, as opposed to a special-education one, Black's Law Dictionary, 7th Edn., p. 965....
Paleologist
One versed in paleology a student of antiquity...
Rolls of the temple
Rolls of the temple. In the two Temples was a roll called the Calves-head Roll, wherein every bencher, barrister, and student, was taxed yearly at so much to the cook and other offices of the houses, in consideration of a dinner of calves-head, provided in Easter term, Orig. Jurid. 199....
Rusticate
Rusticate, is power given to vice-chancellor to suspend any student pending enquiry for a given period of time, AIR 1980 Kar 39 (42)....
Sinderesis
Sinderesis, a natural power of the soul, set in the highest part thereof, moving and stirring it to good, and abhorring evil. And therefore sinderesis never sinneth nor erreth. And this sinderesis our Lord put in man, to the intent that the order of this should be observed. And therefore sinderesis is called by some men the law of reason, for it ministereth the principles of the law of reason, the which be in every man by nature, in that he is a reasonable creature, Doctor and Student, 39...
Westoxication
Westoxication, toxication caused by western culture and values. 'Westoxicated sophistication, which he acquired in England as a student, was anathema to the community in whose name he organized, campaigned and bitterly insisted to the end on the formation of Pakistan.' [M.A. Jinnah - The Divisive Genius Who Engineered India's Vivisection in Legally Speaking, Universal Law Publishing Co. Pvt. Ltd., p. 3; Also See Off the Bench, p. 177]. (Justice V.R. Krishna Iyer)...
Penologist
One versed in or a student of penology...
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