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Obsolete

Law ObscenityObstructing justice

OBSOLETE. This term is applied to those laws which have lost their efficacy, without being repealed, ...

 


Obsolete. The name of a penalty formerly incurred by a ward in chivalry when he or she married contrary to the wishes of his or her guardian in chivalry.

obsolete: an apparent, plain, or downright murder. It was used to distinguish a willful murder from a chance-medley or manslaughter. Spelman; Cowell; Blount.
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Abet ...

[Obsolete French, from Old French, from Medieval Latin impostum, from Latin, neuter of impostus, variant of impositus, past participle of impōnere, to place upon. See impose.] ...

An obsolete term of old English common law referring to a murder which was neither accidental, as a manslaughter, nor was it premeditated or accidental.
John Bouvier's Law Dictionary defines aberemurder as follows: ...

Coparcenary
An obsolete co-ownership mechanism of English law where property, if there was no will, always went to the eldest son. If there was no male heir, the property went to all the female children collectively as a form of co-ownership.

St Aubyn (1899, A.C. 549) it was said that proceedings for scandalizing the court itself were obsolete in England.

A federal law that is designed to prevent inaccurate or obsolete information from entering or remaining in a credit report.

[obsolete or dialect boot compensation, from Old English bOt advantage, compensation] ...

Injurious practices, such as withholding beneficial patents that might make obsolete some widely used product or process, have developed.

The primary meaning - a deed or sealed instrument - is obsolete. Used alone, the word now refers to certain instruments which eminate from government, in the nature of letters-patent. See 1 Story, Const. § 161.

To warn, to garnish the heir, is to warn the heir. Obsolete. ... more
GARNISHEE
practice. A person who has money or property in his possession, belonging to a defendant, which money or property has been attached in his hands, and he... more ...

Carriage Road Bridleway, CR Footpath ; obsolete terms found on some DM&S with similar meaning to RUPP
CTC
Cyclists Touring Club, the oldest highways 'user group'.

administratrix An older term referring to a female administrator; the term is largely obsolete; the term administrator is now generally used to refer to all administrators.

Depreciate In accounting, to reduce the value of an asset each year on the basis that the asset (such as equipment, a vehicle, or a structure) will eventually become obsolete, worn out, and of little value.
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depreciate
v. in accounting, to reduce the value of an asset each year theoretically on the basis that the assets (such as equipment, vehicles or structures) will eventually become obsolete, worn out and of little value.

See also: Law, Person, Term, State, Right

Law ObscenityObstructing justice

 
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