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| the liquid part of blood or lymph, as distinguished from the suspended elements |
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| to give notice to; inform; advise |
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with even stronger reason
applies to a situation in which if one thing is true then it can be inferred tht a seccond thing is even certainly more true.
If Abel is too young to be administratore, then his younger brother is certainly too young |
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| continue forever; to infinity; without limit |
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| inherited, present at birth; characterized by lack of pigment in skin |
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| a remedy that relieves or allays pain |
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| eating disorder; reduced appetite or total aversion to food |
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| from front to back; when chest x-ray taken: back against film plate and x-ray machine in front of patient |
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| the district within which a bailie or bailiff has jurisdiction |
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| apathetic to pleasure or excitement |
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| gathering data by observing behavior |
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| a bluish color of the skin and the mucous membranes due to insufficient oxygen in the blood. |
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| the act or process of falling into an inferior condition or state; deterioration; decay |
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| situated at the back or dorsum |
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fixed flexion contracture of the hand where fingers bend towards palm and cannot be straightened
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| a collection of pus in a body cavity, esp. the pleural cavity |
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| the oxygen-carrying pogment of red blood cells that gives them their red color and serves to convey oxygen to the tissues |
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| an irrational fear of water |
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| inward curvature of a portion of the vertebral column; swayback; makes buttocks appear prominent |
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| the predetermination to commit an unlawful act, esp. to kill or seriously injure |
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| an x-ray photograph of the spinal cord, following administration of a radiopaque substance into the spinal subarachnoid space |
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| not of sound mind; mentally incapable of managing one's affairs |
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applies retroactively to correct an earlier ruling
"Now for then" when a party forgets to file papers for a divorce so divorce isn't final, then one party remarries causing an issue, order grants divorce retroactive to earlier date |
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| ear, nose, throat, and head doctor |
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| the roof of the mouth separating mouth from nasal cavity |
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| a question must be answered by reference to facts of evidence and inferences arising from those facts |
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| the chronic tendency toward repetition of criminal or antisocial behavior patterns |
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| the thing or matter speaks for itself |
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| a case that has been decided |
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| green, vegetated areas on each side of streams and rivers |
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| neurological test to detect poor balance |
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| psychological tst in which subjects' perceptions of inkblot are recorded then analyzed using psychological interpretation |
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| without a day specified for a future meeting |
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| a condition without which it could not be |
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| a violent straining or wrenching of the parts around a joint without dislocation |
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| the doctrine under which courts adhere to precedent on questions of law in order to insure certainty, consistency and stability in the administration of justice with departure from precedent permitted for compelling reasons |
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| a cavity, usually in the lungs, containing pus |
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| dryness; dehydration of skin |
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| a lessening, a reduction, a complete termination |
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| making less or destroying, a reduction of claims |
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| to knowingly assist another in the commission of a crime |
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a condensed form of a record. The summary of the essential points of a court record.
a brief summary of a research article, thesis, review, conference proceeding or any in-depth analysis of a particular subject or discipline |
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| to touch along a border, to adjoin |
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| a person who contributes to or aids in the commission of an unlawful act, a partner in guilt in a crime |
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| growth in size by addition or accumulation |
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| to charge with or declare to have committed a crime |
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| certificate of a notary public that a person has appeared before him and declared the document to be a genuine statement and that the person who signed the instrument is in fact the person named therein; and that he or she did sign it. |
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| to release, absolve, or discharge from an obligation or liability, certify innocence |
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| an action handled out of court, done by persons on their own, rather than in court. |
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| personal actions done or directed against or with reference to a specific person |
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| action against the thing. And action started to affect a specific item or several items of property |
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| cannot sue for damages caused by a disaster that occurs as a result of natural causes unaided by any human action |
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| amount of damages demanded. A particular clause in a complaint that states the plaintiff's damages |
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| a thing to be added, appendix, supplement |
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| to offer as proof, to present |
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| for this. for this special purpose, may be temporary |
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| to the same point or effect, in agreement |
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| without limit, indefinitely or into the unforeseeable |
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| during a period of time, between now and its end |
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| to decide, settle, or decree, when a court decides on a matter judicially |
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| the giving or pronouncement of a judgment or decree in a cause |
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| at the pleasure of, at will, at liberty |
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| for the lawsuit. for the purposes of the suit being prosecuted |
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| to warn and caustion against specific faults |
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| according to value; taxes based upon the value of the thing being taxed. |
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| an opponent in a legal controversy. the opposing party |
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| a jury answering framed questions of fact |
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| the maker of an affidavit or deposition under oath |
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| a witness who for religious or personal reasons does not wish to be sworn may affirm testimony is truthful |
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| an assertion without proof |
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| the defendant pleads guilty, but does not admit committing the crime. |
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| another name, an assumed name |
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| otherwise call. The full term describing people who assume false names |
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| a physical circumstance involving a physical impossibility of the guilt of the accused. |
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| from another source; from the outside |
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| court's formal inquiry of the prisoner as to whether he has any legal cause to show why jugment should not be pronounced against him on a verdict of conviction |
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| having more than one meaning |
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| an instrument subject to change |
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| supporting, attendant upon |
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| the intention to make a will. |
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| case summaries that are not official but follow and explain statutes printed |
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| declaration by a court that two people are not married and that no marriage ever existed between them |
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| paper containing defendant's statement of defense |
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| party initiating the appeal; loser of first trial |
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| party ina cause against whom an appeal has been taken. winner of first trial; also called respondent. |
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| from the most recent point of view; ascertaining truty by means of actual experience or observation. |
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involves deductive reasoning
requiring no evidence for its validation or support |
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from the back, in arrears
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| calling a defendant to answer the charge against him |
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