Juridical Dictionary

This dictionary contains:
8526
juridical terms

Patrimonial




Patrimonial

A thing, which comes from the father, and by extension, from the mother or other ancestor.

RELATED TERMS
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Comes
1) Offices. A Count. An officer during the middle ages, who possessed civil and military authority. 2) Pleading. The word comes, venit, expresses the appearance of the defendant , in court.

Father
Domestic relations. He by whom a child is begotten.

Extension
Common law. This term is applied among merchants to signify an agreement made between a debtor and his creditors, by which the latter, in order to enable the former, embarrassed in his circumstances, to retrieve his standing, agree to wait for a definite length of time after their several claims should become due and payable, before they will demand payment.

Mother
Domestic relations. A woman who has borne a child.



SIMILAR TERMS
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Patria
The country; the men of the neighborhood competent to serve on a jury; a jury. This word is nearly synonymous with pais.

Patria potestas
Civil law. Paternal power, the authority which is lawfully exercised by the father over his children.

Patricide
One guilty of killing his father.

Patrimonium
Civil law. That which is capable, of being inherited.

Patrimony
Patrimony is sometimes understood to mean all kinds of property but its more limited signification , includes only such estate, as has descended in the same family and in a still more confined sense, it is only that which has descended or been devised in a direct line from the father, and by extension, from the mother, or other ancestor.

Patrinus
A godfather.

Patriot Act
The "Uniting and Strengthening America by Providing Appropriate Tools Required to Intercept and Obstruct Terrorism (USA PATRIOT ACT) Act" of 2001 was adopted by the US Senate on the 24th of October of the said year as a result of 9/11.

Patron
eccles. law. He who has the disposition and gift of an ecclesiastical benefice. In the Roman law it signified the former master of a freedman.

Patronage
The right of appointing to office; as the patronage of the president of the United States, if abused, may endanger the liberties of the people.

Patronus
Roman civil law. This word is a modification of the, Latin word pater, father; a denomination applied by Romulus to the first, senators of Rome, and which they always afterwards bore. Romulus at first appointed a hundred of them. Seven years afterwards, in consequence of the association of Tatius to the Romans, a hundred more were appointed, chosen from the Sabines.

Patruelis
Civil law. A cousin german by the father's side; the son or daughter of a father's brother.

Patruus
Civil law. An uncle by the father's side, a father's brother. Patruus magnus, is a grandfather's brother, grand uncle. Patruus major, is a great-grandfather's brother. Patruus maximus, is a, great-grandfather's father's brother.



PREVIOUS AND NEXT TERMS
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Paternity
The state or condition of a father.

Pathology
med. jur. The science or doctrine of diseases. In cases of homicides, abortions, and the like, it is of great consequence to the legal practitioner to be acquainted, in some degree, with pathology.

Patria
The country; the men of the neighborhood competent to serve on a jury; a jury. This word is nearly synonymous with pais.

Patria potestas
Civil law. Paternal power, the authority which is lawfully exercised by the father over his children.

Patricide
One guilty of killing his father.

Patrimonial

Patrimonium
Civil law. That which is capable, of being inherited.

Patrimony
Patrimony is sometimes understood to mean all kinds of property but its more limited signification , includes only such estate, as has descended in the same family and in a still more confined sense, it is only that which has descended or been devised in a direct line from the father, and by extension, from the mother, or other ancestor.

Patrinus
A godfather.

Patron
eccles. law. He who has the disposition and gift of an ecclesiastical benefice. In the Roman law it signified the former master of a freedman.

Patronage
The right of appointing to office; as the patronage of the president of the United States, if abused, may endanger the liberties of the people.

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This dictionary contains 8526 terms.







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