Juridical Dictionary

This dictionary contains:
8526
juridical terms

Horse




Horse

Until a horse has attained the age of four years, he is called a colt. This word is sometimes used as a generic name for all animals of the horse kind

RELATED TERMS
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Horse
Until a horse has attained the age of four years, he is called a colt. This word is sometimes used as a generic name for all animals of the horse kind

Years
Estate for years.

Colt
An animal of the horse species, whether male or female, not more than four years old.

Word
Construction. One or more syllables which when united convey an idea a single part of speech.

Name
One or more words used to distinguish a particular individual, as Socrates, Benjamin Franklin.



SIMILAR TERMS
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Hors de son fee
Pleading in the ancient English law. These words signify out of his fee. A plea which was pleaded, when a person who pretended to be the lord, brought an action for rent services, as issuing out of his land: because if the defendant could prove the land was out of his fee, the action failed.



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Homologation
Civil law. Approbation, confirmation by a court of justice, a judgment which orders the execution of some act; as, the approbation of an award, and ordering execution on the same.

Honesty
That principle which requires us to give every one his due. Nul ne doit slenrichir aux de ens du droit d'autrui. The very object of social order is to promote honesty, and to restrain dishonesty; to do justice and to prevent injustice. It is no less a maxim of law than of religion, do unto others as you wish to be done by.

Honor
1) High estimation. A testimony of high estimation. Dignity. Reputation. Dignified respect of character springing from probity, principle, or moral rectitude. A duel is not justified by any insult to our honor. Honor is also employed to signify integrity in a judge, courage in a soldier, and chastity in a woman. To deprive a woman of her honor is, in some cases, punished as a public wrong, and by an action for the recovery of damages done to the relative rights of a hushand or a father. 2) English law. The seigniory of a lord paramount.

Honorarium
Recompense for services rendered. It is usually applied only to the recompense given to persons whose business is connected with science; as the fee paid to counsel. It is said this honorarium is purely voluntary, and differs from a fee, which may be recovered by action

Hors de son fee
Pleading in the ancient English law. These words signify out of his fee. A plea which was pleaded, when a person who pretended to be the lord, brought an action for rent services, as issuing out of his land: because if the defendant could prove the land was out of his fee, the action failed.

Horse

Horton's key
A quay near London Bridge in Southwark during the Middle Ages. The Admiralty Court sat in a building on Horton's quay and at the Church St. Margaret-at-Hill nearby prior to the Great Fire of 1666, following which the Court moved to Doctors' Commons.

Hostage
A person delivered into the possession of a public enemy in the time of war, as a security for the performance of a contract entered into between the belligerents.

Hostellagium
English law. A right reserved to the lords to be lodged and entertained in the houses of their tenants.

Hostile witness
During an examination-in-chief, a lawyer is not allowed to ask leading questions of their own witness. But, if that witness openly shows hostility against the interests (or the person) that the lawyer represents, the lawyer may ask the court to declare the witness "hostile", after which, as an exception of the examination-in-chief rules, the lawyer may ask their own witness leading questions.

Hostility
A state of open enmity; open war. Hostility, as it regards individuals, may be permanent or temporary; it is permanent when the individual is a citizen or subject of the government at war, and temporary when he happens to be domiciliated or resident in the country of one of the belligerents; in this latter case the individual may throw off the national character he has thus acquired by residence, when he puts himself in motion, bona fide, to quit the country sine animo revertendi.

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This dictionary contains 8526 terms.







orse / hrse / hose / hore / hors / hhorse / hoorse / horrse / horsse / horsee / yorse / uorse / jorse / norse / borse / gorse / torse / h9rse / h0rse / hprse / hlrse / hkrse / hirse / h8rse / ho4se / ho5se / hotse / hogse / hofse / hodse / hoese / ho3se / horwe / horee / horde / horxe / horze / horae / horqe / hors3 / hors4 / horsr / horsf / horsd / horss / horsw /