Inter alia The Latin term "Inter alia" means, in a UK legal context: "amongst other things". Post this page to: Deli.cio.us Digg Facebook reddit StumbleUpon ...
Inter Alia Latin term for among other things.It is a phrase used in legal proceedings that few facts stated are only part of the entire facts or rules and not the entire thing. Legal-Explanations.com Home ...
Inter alia Latin: "among other things", "for example" or "including". Legal drafters would use it to precede a list of examples or samples covered by a more general descriptive statement.
INTER ALIA Among other things Used to indicate partial disclosure of details, facts, statements, etc. extracted from a whole. INTER ARMA SILENT LEGES In time of war, the laws are silent ...
inter aliaAmong other things. interlocutoryTemporary. Often used to describe a court order that is not a final disposition of the case but only decides some point in it.
inter alia: Among other things. interlocutory: provisional; temporary; not final - refers to orders and decrees of a court ...
inter alia - Among other things. interlocutory appeal - An appeal to an appellate court of a temporary or provisional order of a trial court. The appellate court is not required to hear the appeal.
inter alia (in-tur eh-lee-ah) prep. Latin for "among other things". This phrase is often found in legal pleadings and writings to specify one example out of many possibilities.
inter alia See alia. interest (1) compensation paid for the use or detention of money, as in interest on a savings account; (2) a direct connection with property or some situation; e.g.
INTER ALIA. Among other things; as, "the said premises, which inter alia, Titius granted to Caius." INTER ALIOS. Between other parties, who are strangers to the proceeding in question.
Inter Alia "among other things." Used in pleadings before a court or opinions of a court. ie. "The defendant claims, inter alia, that the plaintiff fails to establish . . ." [edit] J ...
inter alia Literally among others. Seldom capitalized, since it doesn't appear at the beginning of sentences but adds to the words immediately preceding it. For example, "The plaintiff's principle argument, inter alia, is that ...
The Church of Scientology: "Plaintiffs (Scientologists) have abused the federal court system by using it, inter alia, to destroy their opponents, rather than to resolve an actual dispute over trademark law or any other legal matter.
'Extermination' includes the intentional infliction of conditions of life, inter alia the deprivation of access to food and medicine, calculated to bring about the destruction of part of a population; ...
Inter alia: (Latin: among other things) Used to precede a list of examples covered by a more general descriptive statement.
In determining proportionality, a court, bearing in mind any in personam punishment of the owner, should consider, inter alia, the following factors in determining the harshness of the forfeiture: (1) the fair market value of the property; ...
COVIN (from the Fr. covine, or couvine, from Lat. convenire, to come together), an association of persons, so used in the Statute of Labourers of 1360, which, inter alia, declared void "all alliances and covins of masons and carpenters.
A self-defense claim that a defendant is incapable of distinguishing between right and wrong or of controlling his or her impulses as a result of being subjected to prolonged physical or mental abuse, i.e. as a result of, inter alia, ...
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