Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. continue to define and redefine legal terms; the states are increasingly adopting uniform or model laws and rules; and new causes of action and legal concepts continue unabated. The vocabulary of the law has likewise continued to change and expand to keep pace. This has necessitated not only a significant

  2. LAW DICTIONARY The! Sphinx ® Publishing An Imprint of Sourcebooks, Inc. ® Naperville, Illinois www.SphinxLegal.com Reference/Legal Reference SPHINX DICTIONARIES ISBN-13: 978-1-57248-650-8 ISBN-10: 1-57248-650-3 $11.99 U.S. $12.99 CAN £6.99 UK UPC EAN is an up-to-date legal reference, containing over 3,000 entries explaining legal language ...

    • 1MB
    • 562
  3. Oct 20, 2024 · Described by leading university lecturers as ‘the best law dictionary’ and ‘excellent for non-law students as well as law undergraduates’, this classic dictionary is an invaluable source of legal reference for professionals, students, and anyone else needing succinct clarification of legal terms. Focusing primarily on English law, it ...

    • Jonathan Law
    • Copyright
    • Introduction
    • Ad infinitum
    • Adverse witness
    • Affidavit
    • Affirm
    • Authorised share Capital
    • Beneficiary
    • Binding effect Binding over
    • Child Support Maintenance
    • Circumstantial Evidence
    • Citation
    • Concealment
    • Copyright
    • Coroner
    • Extraordinary general Meeting
    • Factor
    • Habeas corpus
    • Harassment of debtors
    • High Court (of Justice)
    • Housing associations
    • Hypothecation
    • Judge Advocate of the Fleet
    • winding up
    • administration
    • Liabilities
    • Matrimonial causes
    • Memorandum and articles of association
    • Misrepresentation
    • Occupation
    • Order in Council
    • Precedent
    • Precept
    • Public nuisance
    • Quorum
    • Remainder
    • Repossession or Repossess
    • Representation
    • Sale or return
    • Salvage
    • Satisfaction
    • behaviour
    • Uterine
    • Ward of court

    Plain English Campaign owns the copyright to this guide. You can save one copy of the guide to disk, and print one copy out for your personal use. You must not make more than one copy without our permission.

    The language used in law is changing. Many lawyers are now adopting a plain English style. But there are still legal phrases that baffle non-lawyers. This guide is intended to help in two ways: it should help non-lawyers understand legal phrases; and it should give lawyers ideas for explaining the legal phrases that they use. The explanations in th...

    endlessly or forever. (This term is Latin.) . Adoption Adoptive child Adoptive parent Ad valorem Adverse possession

    the system which people use to become parents, even though they are not the child's natural parents. child who has been legally adopted. person who has legally adopted a child. in proportion to the value. An ad valorem duty goes up as the value of the goods, shares and so on that it is charged on rises. (This term is Latin.) intentionally occupying...

    is: the lawyer who speaks in court for a client; Scottish lawyer who is the equivalent of a or barrister in England and Wales. a written statement which is sworn to be true by the person signing it. It is sworn before someone authorised by the court.

    to: solemnly promise to tell the truth in court; solemnly promise to tell the truth in an affidavit; confirm a decision made by a lower court; or allow a contract to continue even though it could have been cancelled because it was fundamentally breached. evidence that the person was somewhere else when the crime was committed; or an attempt to prov...

    a report and opinion, by an independent person or firm, on an organisation's financial records. the highest amount of share capital that a company can issue. The amount is set out in the company's memorandum of association. B

    to the income their land generates; or to use the land for their own purposes. It can also be a person who really owns something even though it is held in someone else's name. someone who benefits from a will, a trust or a life Bequeath Bequest Bigamy Bill of costs Bill of exchange Bill of lading Bill of sale

    insurance policy. to leave something (such as possessions or money) to someone in your will. You cannot bequeath land or real property but you can devise them instead. something given in a will, other than land or real property. the offence committed by someone who is already married but still goes through a marriage ceremony with someone else. the...

    T Chose Chose in action Chose in possession Circuit Circuit judge

    the amount of maintenance the parent not living with heir child must pay. an item of property (anything which can be owned). a right such as a patent, or a right to recover a debt. A chose in action does not physically exist. For example, you cannot touch patents or rights because they have no physical existence. an object which physically exists, ...

    is: summons to appear in court; quoting from a completed case to support an argument; or notice sent out by someone wanting grant of probate or letters of administration, asking people to come forward if they object to it. to apply for a right; to demand a remedy; or an application for something such as a right.

    company. failure by one side negotiating a contract to disclose (reveal) information which the other side would need to consider when deciding whether or not to go ahead. an agreement by two or more people to commit crime; or some people acting together and harming a third party. Consumer credit Agreement

    a legal right which stops things being copied without permission. If you have the copyright over something

    (such as a book or music), nobody can copy it or reproduce it without your permission. person who investigates the cause of death when person has suffered a sudden, violent or suspicious death. the body of a person who has been killed unlawfully; or the facts which make up an offence.(This phrase is Latin.) D a commitment such as a debt; contract b...

    a general meeting of the members of a company which is not the annual general meeting. F

    is: someone buying or selling for a commission; or an organisation which provides finance for a business by advancing money on the value of the invoices the business sends out. Scotland). illness. G H

    a writ which can be applied for to order a person's release if they have been imprisoned unlawfully.

    the illegal act of attempting to collect a debt by threatening, or habitually acting in a way that humiliates or distresses, a debtor.

    part of the Supreme Court. It is split into three divisions called: Queen's Bench Division; Chancery Division; and Family Division. refuses to testify in support of the people who called them; or testifies in a way which differs from their previous statement.

    organisations run to provide housing for people. They are not intended to make a profit.

    a person giving a bank authority to sell goods which have been pledged to the bank as security for a loan. I someone to do something; or not to do something. Issue Issued share capital J something. the legal word for: children; or the matter to be decided by a court action. share capital which has been allocated to shareholders who have subscribed ...

    lawyer who is in charge of military justice in the British Army and the Royal Air Force. government department which appoints barristers to advise army and air force courts. lawyer who is in charge of military justice in the British Navy. the territory in which a court can operate; the power it has to deal with particular cases; or the power it has...

    a winding up ordered because fairness cannot be achieved for all the members of a company. K L Letters of

    an authority the courts give to a person to deal with a dead person's estate. It is given when someone dies intestate.

    the debts that a person or organisation owes. M Manslaughter killing someone illegally but by accident. the Civil Division of the Appeal Court; and admitting solicitors to the roll of solicitors in Material facts Matricide

    person who is protected by the High Court, such as minor.

    person who is protected by the High Court, such as minor.

    person who is protected by the High Court, such as minor.

    person who is protected by the High Court, such as minor.

    person who is protected by the High Court, such as minor.

    person who is protected by the High Court, such as minor.

    person who is protected by the High Court, such as minor.

    person who is protected by the High Court, such as minor.

    person who is protected by the High Court, such as minor.

    person who is protected by the High Court, such as minor.

    person who is protected by the High Court, such as minor.

    person who is protected by the High Court, such as minor.

    person who is protected by the High Court, such as minor.

    person who is protected by the High Court, such as minor.

    person who is protected by the High Court, such as minor.

    person who is protected by the High Court, such as minor.

    person who is protected by the High Court, such as minor.

    person who is protected by the High Court, such as minor.

    • 333KB
    • 82
  4. The use of language in UK law is often changing, and there are also a lot of legal specific terms that you’ll need to know. The LexisNexis Legal Glossary index provides a comprehensive reference point for the more complex terms in the industry.

  5. Dec 30, 2010 · Definitions play a fundamental role in legal discourse, which can be identified in its two basic functions: avoiding ambiguity in interpretation, and warranting the application of a law to a case ...

  6. People also ask

  7. LEGITIMIZE definition: 1. to make something legal or acceptable: 2. to make something legal or acceptable: 3. to make…. Learn more.

  1. People also search for