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Suspensive - Law Dictionary Search Results

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Armistice

Armistice, a suspension of hostilities between belligerents.

condition

the obligated party NOTE: article 1770 of the louisiana civil code eliminates the term potestative condition, stating that suspensive conditions which depend on the whim of the obligated party make the obligation null, and that resolutory conditions

Martial law

p. 297, Constitution of India, Art. 34. Martial Law, in the proper sense of the term, means the suspension of ordinary law and the government of a country or parts of it by military tribunals. It must

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Slime

Slime, is the term used in milling practice to describe a suspension, in water of the fully divided fraction of pulverized ore; also solid, whether suspended or after setting out

Parole

Parole is not a suspension of sentence, but is a substitution, during continuance of parole, of lower grade of punishment by confinement in

centrifuge

liquid and separating substances such as particles of solid or globules of an immiscible liquid mixed together in suspension within the liquid Suspensions which would settle only very slowly or not at all under gravity can be

bioreactor

an apparatus in which a suspension of microorganisms in a liquid are used to perform chemical reactions as in synthesis of pharmaceutical agents or

Militia

enrolments for the Militia were from time to time suspended. Finally in 1865, by the (English) Militia (Ballot Suspension) Act, 1865--a temporary Act, continued annually from time to time by successive Expiring Laws Continuance Acts--these statutes were

Lock out

Disputes Act, 1947 (14 of 1947)] It means the temporary closing of a place of employment, or the suspension of work, or the refusal by an employer to continue to employ and number of persons employed by

Brawling

laymen by the (English) Ecclesiastical Courts Jurisdiction Act, 1860 (23 & 24 Vict. c. 32)], by excommunication and suspension, and also, by the unrepealed but disused 1 Mary, st. 2, c. 3, by imprisonment until the party

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Suspensive - 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.

Armistice

Armistice, a suspension of hostilities between belligerents.

condition

the obligated party NOTE: article 1770 of the louisiana civil code eliminates the term potestative condition, stating that suspensive conditions which depend on the whim of the obligated party make the obligation null, and that resolutory conditions

Martial law

p. 297, Constitution of India, Art. 34. Martial Law, in the proper sense of the term, means the suspension of ordinary law and the government of a country or parts of it by military tribunals. It must

Keep your definitions linked to case research

Slime

Slime, is the term used in milling practice to describe a suspension, in water of the fully divided fraction of pulverized ore; also solid, whether suspended or after setting out

Parole

Parole is not a suspension of sentence, but is a substitution, during continuance of parole, of lower grade of punishment by confinement in

centrifuge

liquid and separating substances such as particles of solid or globules of an immiscible liquid mixed together in suspension within the liquid Suspensions which would settle only very slowly or not at all under gravity can be

bioreactor

an apparatus in which a suspension of microorganisms in a liquid are used to perform chemical reactions as in synthesis of pharmaceutical agents or

Militia

enrolments for the Militia were from time to time suspended. Finally in 1865, by the (English) Militia (Ballot Suspension) Act, 1865--a temporary Act, continued annually from time to time by successive Expiring Laws Continuance Acts--these statutes were

Lock out

Disputes Act, 1947 (14 of 1947)] It means the temporary closing of a place of employment, or the suspension of work, or the refusal by an employer to continue to employ and number of persons employed by

Brawling

laymen by the (English) Ecclesiastical Courts Jurisdiction Act, 1860 (23 & 24 Vict. c. 32)], by excommunication and suspension, and also, by the unrepealed but disused 1 Mary, st. 2, c. 3, by imprisonment until the party

  • Last »

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