单词 | remancipate |
释义 | remancipatev. Roman Law. transitive. To reconvey to the previous owner; to return the rights over (a person, especially a child, or an item of property) to the mancipant. Also intransitive. ΘΚΠ society > law > transfer of property > types of transfer > [verb (transitive)] > mancipate > remancipate remancipate1656 1656 T. Blount Glossographia Remancipate, to sell again any~thing to him who first sold it to us. [Also in later dictionaries.] c1850 E. A. Andrews Copious & Crit. Lat.-Eng. Lexicon 1297/2 Rĕ-mancĭpo, to transfer back again, remancipate. 1853 T. C. Sandars tr. Justinian Institutes 134 Originally, an express contract was made, contracta fiducia, to bind the purchaser to remancipate or to manumit, reserving the rights of patronage to the father, as the case might be. 1880 J. Muirhead tr. Gaius Institutes i. 51 Unless they have been remancipated by the mancipee to their father or grandfather. 1921 Classical Philol. 16 249 He had to acquire ownership, because he could not manumit or remancipate one who was not his own. 1998 J. F. Gardner Family & Familia in Rom. Law & Life i. 11 At this stage, the son was still in mancipio to the notional buyer. He was then remancipated to his father, who carried out a third manumission. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2009; most recently modified version published online March 2022). < v.1656 |
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