"Assath" is a word in LAW AND LEGAL
An ancient custom In wells, by which a person accused of crime could dear himself by the oaths of three hundred men. It wns abolished by St. 1 Hen. V. c
We all are wearing many hundred glasses of different colors. Therefore, everyone sees the world in different views. Somehow, if we could remove those glasses, we can see the world with real colors. Name of the most difficult to remove glass is ‘there are permanent things of mine.
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An American businessman goes to Japan on a business trip, but he hates Japanese food, so he asks the concierge at his hotel if there's any place around where he can get American food. The concierge tells him he's in luck; there's a pizza place that just opened, and they deliver. The concierge gives the businessman the phone number, and he goes back to his room and orders a pizza. Thirty minutes later, the delivery guy shows up to the door with the pizza. The businessman takes the pizza, and starts sneezing uncontrollably. He asks the delivery man, ''What the heck did you put on this pizza?'' The delivery man bows deeply and says, ''We put on the pizza what you ordered, pepper only.''
A table or tray strewn with sand, anciently used for drawing, calculating, etc.
Read the complete definitionof old; of an ancient date
Read the complete definitionLat An. officer having charge of acta, public records, registers, jour-nals, or minutes; an officer who entered on record the …
Read the complete definitionThis takes place where a person dies seised of an inheritance, and, before the heir or devisee enters, a stranger, …
Read the complete definitionIn ancient English law. A renunciation of one's country, a species of self-imposed banishment, under an oath never to return …
Read the complete definitionA mystical word used as a charm and engraved on gems among the ancients; also, a gem stone thus engraved.
Read the complete definitionwithout impeachment of waste; without accountability for waste; without liability to suit for v/aste. A clause anciently often in-serted in …
Read the complete definitionIncomprehensibility of things; the doctrine held by the ancient Skeptic philosophers, that human knowledge never amounts to certainty, but only …
Read the complete definitionThe act or posture of reclining on a couch, as practiced by the ancients at meals.
Read the complete definitionLeaning or reclining, as the ancients did at their meals.
Read the complete definitionA fabulous people reported by ancient writers to have heads.
Read the complete definitionThe levelers in the reign of Hen. I., who acknowledged no head or superior. Leges H. 1; Cowell. Also certain …
Read the complete definitionAnciently, a snake, called dart snake; now, one of a genus of reptiles closely allied to the lizards.
Read the complete definitionZTGHT, or ACRE. A camp or field fight; a sort of duel, or judicial combat, anciently fought by slngie combatants, …
Read the complete definitionA kind of adoption in ancient Rome. See Arrogation.
Read the complete definitionThe innermost sanctuary or shrine in ancient temples, whence oracles were given. Hence: A private chamber; a sanctum.
Read the complete definitionA magistrate in ancient Rome, who had the superintendence of public buildings, highways, shows, etc.; hence, a municipal officer.
Read the complete definitionApplied to a kind of variegated glass beads of ancient manufacture; as, aggry beads are found in Ashantee and Fantee …
Read the complete definitionIn ancient law. To take ln and feed the cattle of straugers in the king’s forest, and to collect the …
Read the complete definitionAn assembly; hence, the place of assembly, especially the market place, in an ancient Greek city.
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