单词 | stipulation |
释义 | stipulationn.1 The action or an act of stipulating, in various senses of the verb. ΘΚΠ the mind > language > speech > agreement > promise > [noun] > pledge or assurance wordOE costOE earnest1221 fayc1300 certainty1303 wager1306 plighta1325 pledge1371 assurancec1386 undertaking?a1400 faithc1405 surementc1410 to make affiancec1425 earnest pennya1438 warrant1460 trow1515 fidelity1531 stipulation1552 warranty1555 pawn1573 arrha1574 avouchment1574 assumption1590 word of honour1598 avouch1603 assecurance1616 preassurance1635 tower-stamp1642 parole of honour1648 spondence1657 honour1659 1552 R. Huloet Abcedarium Anglico Latinum Stipulation, bonde, bargayne, obligation, or promise to do, perfourme, & satisfye yt thinge for the whyche suche stipulation or bond is made, whether it be for paiment of any summe of mony, or other act to be performed,..stipulatio. 1560 J. Daus tr. J. Sleidane Commentaries f. cclxiiijv The Emperour pardoned them al, taking stipulation of them, that they shoulde no more weare armure against him [L. accepta fide ne etc.]. 1597 R. Hooker Of Lawes Eccl. Politie v. lxiv. 156 Because the answere which they make to the vsuall demaunds of stipulation proposed in baptisme is not their owne. 1615 J. Sylvester Honor's Farwel in 2nd Session Parl. Vertues Reall sig. Hh5v To trust our Soule with such whose Stipulation Cannot repaire, cannot repriue, Damnation. a1631 J. Donne Serm. (1953) VI. 140 Thou art bound to live according to that stipulation and contract, made in thy behalfe, at thy receiving of that Sacrament [of Baptism]. 1660 R. Coke Justice Vindicated 2 A Contract is the mutual stipulation of two or more, that they will do or give. 1674 J. Owen Disc. Holy Spirit (1693) 94 The stipulation of Obedience on our part is consequential thereupon. 1719 W. Wood Surv. Trade (ed. 2) 294 We can have no Security that the Subjects of those Nations shall not clandestinely Trade to the South-Seas, notwithstanding such Stipulation to the contrary, if they find any Advantage therein. a. A contract, agreement, treaty. Obsolete. ΘΚΠ the mind > language > speech > agreement > [noun] > an agreement forewardOE accordc1275 covenant1297 end1297 form1297 frettec1330 conjurationc1374 treatc1380 bargainc1386 contractc1386 comenaunt1389 compositionc1405 treaty1427 pact1429 paction1440 reconventionc1449 treatisea1464 hostage1470 packa1475 trystc1480 bond (also band) of manrent1482 covenance1484 concordance1490 patisement1529 capitulation1535 conventmenta1547 convenience1551 compact1555 negotiation1563 sacrament1563 match1569 consortship1592 after-agreementa1600 combourgeoisie1602 convention1603 comburghership1606 transaction1611 end-makingc1613 obligement1627 bare contract1641 stipulation1649 accompackmentc1650 rue-bargaina1657 concordat1683 minute1720 tacka1758 understanding1803 meet1804 it's a go1821 deal1863 whizz1869 stand-in1870 gentlemen's agreement1880 meeting of minds1883 1649 J. Milton Tenure of Kings 28 All which..bore witness that regal power was nothing else but a mutuall Covnant or stipulation between King and people. 1686 J. Scott Christian Life: Pt. II II. vii. 888 That which unites them is..their being obliged together under the same Laws and Stipulations. 1711 J. Swift Conduct of Allies 33 Which is the only Article that I can call to mind, in all our Treaties or Stipulations, with any view of Interest to this Kingdom. 1711 J. Swift Conduct of Allies 47 The Emperor..was by Stipulation to furnish Ninety thousand Men against the Common Enemy. 1804 W. Cruise Digest Laws Eng. Real Prop. III. 27 He doubted..whether a covenant that the mortgagee should present..was not void, being a stipulation for something more than the principal and interest. b. Roman Law. The action of making a contract or agreement in the verbal forms legally binding; a contract or agreement so made. ΘΚΠ society > law > legal obligation > contract > [noun] > action of contracting > verbally stipulationa1623 a1623 H. Swinburne Treat. Spousals (1686) 6 Concerning the Form, so precise were the ancient Romans in the observation thereof, that they did not for a long time admit any other manner of contracting Spousals, but by stipulation. 1681 J. Dalrymple Inst. Law Scotl. x. viii. 116 Instead of the remeids of Stipulation, the inconveniences that rejected naked Paction among the Romans, are remeided with us by this means. 1839 H. Hallam Introd. Lit. Europe II. iv. 238 He dwells on the folly of keeping up the old forms of stipulation in contracts. 1871 E. Poste tr. Gaius Institutionum Iuris Civilis 311 The dumb cannot stipulate or promise, nor can the deaf, for the promisee in stipulation must hear the answer, and the promisor must hear the question. 1880 W. A. Hunter Introd. Roman Law 101 Although the validity of a stipulation depended upon its being made orally, there was nothing to prevent..the practice of recording the terms of the stipulation in writing. c. U.S. Law. An agreement between opposing parties (or their counsels) relative to the course of a judicial proceeding; a requirement or condition of such an agreement. ΘΚΠ society > law > administration of justice > court proceedings or procedure > [noun] > agreement of parties relative to procedure stipulation1817 1817 H. W. Desaussure Rep. Court of Chancery S.-Carolina 2 162 The Court opened a stipulation entered into between the insurers and the insured, by which it was agreed that one case should decide all others. 1828 R. Peters Rep. Supreme Court U.S. 1 449 The want of possession, if consistent with the stipulations of the parties,..has never been held to be, per se, a badge of fraud. 1877 U.S. Rep. (Supreme Court) 94 278 Stipulations between counsel relative to the course of proceeding in a cause pending in this court cannot be withdrawn by one party without the consent of the other. 1909 Northeastern Reporter 88 786/1 By that stipulation the defendants had the right of inspection before final acceptance of the goods. 1948 Pacific Reporter (1949) XCIX. 956/1 The contents of the proposed stipulation with reference to the repairs of the damage as to sidewalks, are merely instructions to workmen. 1977 National Observer (U.S.) 8 Jan. 18/1 Agreements to something he [sc. your counsel] calls ‘stipulations’ pour from his eager lips so thick and fast that soon a miasma of confusion covers you. Eventually you learn that a stipulation is a point or condition agreed upon between the litigants. 3. a. A giving security for the performance of an undertaking. (Cf. stipulate v. 5b)Now only in the language of the Admiralty Courts, after quot. 1648. ΘΚΠ the mind > language > speech > agreement > security > [noun] > guaranteeing or pledging again-behotinga1382 warrantisec1440 warrantisingc1450 acquitc1460 pledging1538 guaranty1592 oppignoration1592 hedginga1631 stipulation1648 warrantship1702 hedge1736 guarantee1786 1648 E. Coke Inst. Lawes Eng. iv. xxii. 135 Whereas time out of minde the Admirall Court hath used to take stipulations for appearance and performance of the Acts and Judgements of the same Court: It is now affirmed..that [etc.]. 1768 W. Blackstone Comm. Laws Eng. III. vii. 108 These courts [of Admiralty]..also take recognizances or stipulation of certain fidejussors in the nature of bail. ΘΚΠ the mind > language > speech > agreement > security > [noun] > guaranteeing or pledging > giving security for an assertion stipulation1720 1720 R. Wodrow Corr. (1843) II. 488 From this method of stipulation, by a solemn appeal to God's omniscience, with implied imprecations to him as a Judge. 1737 D. Waterland Rev. Doctr. Eucharist Introd. 22 They are supposed, when worthily performed, to carry in them all dutiful Allegiance to God,..a Stipulation of a good Conscience, and [etc.]. 4. The action of specifying as one of the terms of a contract or agreement; a formulated term or condition of a contract or agreement. ΘΚΠ the mind > language > speech > agreement > [noun] > terms of agreement > a condition or stipulation mannerc1400 covenantc1440 conditionala1533 authorament1607 requisition1620 postulatum1639 thingum1649 qualification1660 ultimatum1733 requirement1737 term1746 stipulation1750 contingency1818 precondition1825 chapter1864 1750 S. Johnson Rambler No. 75. ⁋11 I have never discovered any lady who did not think wealth a title to some stipulations in her favour. 1766 W. Blackstone Comm. Laws Eng. II. xx. 299 Next follow the terms or stipulations..upon which the grant is made. a1802 S. Horsley Serm. (1816) III. xlii. 266 Hence, we may understand..with what equity and reason salvation is promised in Scripture to faith, without the express stipulation of any other condition. 1817 W. Selwyn Abridgem. Law Nisi Prius (ed. 4) II. 1063 In a case where there was a stipulation between three persons who appeared to the world as partners, that one of them should not participate in the profit and loss. 1848 H. H. Wilson Hist. Brit. India 1805–35 III. iv. 155 The stipulation of the treaty of Yandabo providing for the permanent residence of a representative of the British Government, at the capital of Ava. 1889 S. Walpole Life Ld. J. Russell II. xxviii. 313 The stipulations on which the two emperors had agreed at Villafranca. 5. The action of stipulating for or insisting on something as a condition of agreement; an instance of this, a condition stipulated for. ΘΚΠ the mind > attention and judgement > testing > attestation, witness, evidence > qualification > [noun] > reservation, proviso conditionc1315 preveance?1316 purview1442 proviso1443 provision1450 saving1478 forprise1530 cautel1541 caveat1579 postulate1588 cautiona1593 non obstante1604 reservation1606 unless1606 reservancy1630 salvo1642 reserve1644 stipulation1792 reserver1807 get-out clause1912 clausula rebus sic stantibus1939 escape clause1945 the mind > language > speech > agreement > [noun] > terms of agreement > negotiating or making terms bargain1330 treatyc1405 overture1427 chafferingc1449 treatingc1450 entreat1485 patising1530 practice1540 articulating1562 capitulation1569 entreatance1574 tractation1600 interdealing1611 negotiation1614 tractate1618 haggling1632 traffickinga1649 bargaining1669 conditioning1680 transacting1686 higgling1700 stipulation1792 treatment1828 haggle1829 coming to terms1843 1792 J. Almon Anecd. Life W. Pitt (octavo ed.) II. xxii. 40 Pensions were thrown about indiscriminately... The only stipulation was, ‘Give us your vote.’ 1845 B. Disraeli Sybil III. v. xi. 149 I did not preface it by a stipulation of confidence, because that is idle. 1878 R. B. Smith Carthage 275 The stipulation made by the ease-loving inhabitants and granted by Hannibal, that no Capuan citizen should be required to serve in his army. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1917; most recently modified version published online March 2020). stipulationn.2 Botany. The arrangement of the stipules. ΘΚΠ the world > plants > part of plant > leaf > petiole or leaf-stalk > [noun] > stipule > arrangement of stipules stipulation1760 1760 J. Lee Introd. Bot. iii. xvii. 204 By Stipulation is meant the Situation and Structure of the Stipulæ at the Base of the Leaves. 1830 J. Lindley Introd. Nat. Syst. Bot. 24 Their stipulation points out their affinity with Urticeæ. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1917; most recently modified version published online December 2018). < n.11552n.21760 |
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