Skip to content


Uttering - Law Dictionary Search Results

Home Dictionary Name: uttering Page: 2 Page 2 of about 186 results (0.002 seconds)

Perdition

Entire loss utter destruction ruin esp the utter loss of the soul or of final happiness in a future state future misery or eternal death...


Mutter

To utter words indistinctly or with a low voice and lips partly closed esp to utter indistinct complaints or angry expressions to grumble to growl...


Effable

Capable of being uttered or explained utterable...


res gestae

res gestae [Latin, things done, deeds] 1 : the acts, facts, circumstances, statements, or occurrences that form the environment of a main act or event and esp. of a crime and are so closely connected to it that they constitute part of a continuous transaction and can serve to illustrate its character [the decedent's statement…was too far removed in time and place to be admissible as part of the res gestae "Lynch v. State, 552 N.E.2d 56 (1990)"] 2 a : an exception or set of exceptions to the hearsay rule that permits the admission of hearsay evidence regarding excited utterances or declarations relating to mental, emotional, or bodily states or sense impressions of a witness or participant compare dying declaration and spontaneous declaration at declaration, excited utterance NOTE: Res gestae in common law encompassed a variety of different exceptions to the hearsay rule, but most modern rules of evidence (as the Federal Rules of Evidence) have abandoned use of res gestae and...


Magna Carta

Magna Carta, [Latin 'great charter'] The English charter that King John granted to the barons in 1215 and Henry III and Edward I later confirmed. It is generally regarded as one of the great common-law documents and as the foundation of constitution liberties. The other three great charters of English Liberty are the Petition of Right (3 Car. (1628)), the Habeas Corpus Act (31 Car. 2 (1679)), and the Bill of Rights (1 Will. SM. (1689)). Also spelled Magna charta, Black's Law Dictionary, 7th Edn., p. 963.This Great Charter is based substantially upon the Saxon Common Law, which flourished in this kingdom until the Normaninvasion consolidated the system of feudality, still the great characteristic of the principles of real property. The barons assembled at St.Edmund's Bury, in Suffolk, in the later part of the year 1214, and there solemnly swore upon the high alter to withdraw their allegiance from the Crown, and openly rebel, unless King John confirmed by a formal charter the ancient li...


Platitudinous

Abounding in platitudes of the nature of platitudes uttering platitudes...


Oracular

Of or pertaining to an oracle uttering oracles forecasting the future as an oracular tongue...


Screaming

Uttering screams shrieking...


complaining

uttering complaints Opposite of uncomplaining...


Gnomic

Sententious uttering or containing maxims or striking detached thoughts aphoristic...



Save Judgments// Add Notes // Store Search Result sets // Organize Client Files //