Legal Term Dictionary

Search our free database of thousands of legal terms. The easiest-to-read, most user-friendly guide to legal terms.This dictionary is from the early 20th century and is not to be construed as legal advice.

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  • SYLLOGISM
    In logic. The full logical form of a single argument. It consists of three propositions, (two premises and the conclusion,) and these contain three terms, of which the two occurring in the conclusion ere brought together in the premises by being referred to a common class.
  • SYLVA CAEDUA
    Lat. In ecclesiastical law. Wood of any kind which was kept on purpose to be cut, and which, being cut, grew again from the stump or root. Lynd. Prov. 190; 4 Reeve, Eng. Law, 90.
  • SYMBOLAEOGRAPHY
    The art or cunning rightly to form and make written instruments. It is either judicial or extrajudicial; the latter being wholly occupied with such Instruments as concern matters not yet judicially in controversy, such as instruments of agreements or contracts, and testaments or last wills. Wharton.
  • SYMBOLIC DELIVERY
    The constructive delivery of the subject-matter of a sale, where It is cumbersome or inaccessible, by the actual delivery of some article which la conventionally accepted as the symbol or representative of it, or which renders access to it possible, or which is evidence of the purchaser's title to it.
  • SYMBOLUM ANIMAE
    Lat A mortuary, or soul-scot
  • SYMOND'S INN
    Formerly an inn of chancery.
  • SYNALLAGMATIC CONTRACT
    In the civil law. A bilateral or reciprocal contract in which the parties expressly enter into mutual engagements, each binding himself to the other. Poth. Obi. no. 9.
  • SYNCOPARE
    To cut short, or pronounce things so as not to be understood. Cowell.
  • SYNDIC
    In the civil law. An advocate or patron; a burgess or recorder; an agent or attorney who acts for a corporation or university; an actor or procurator; an assignee. Wharton. See Minnesota L. & T. Co. v. Beebe, 40 Minn. 7, 41 N. W. 232, 2 L. R. A. 418; More...
  • SYNDICATE
    A university committee; A combination of persons or firms united for the purpose of enterprises too large for individuals to undertake; or a group of financiers who buy up the shares of a company in order to sell them at a profit by creating a scarcity. Mozley A Whitley.
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