释义 |
proviso
pro·vi·so P0623300 (prə-vī′zō)n. pl. pro·vi·sos or pro·vi·soes A clause in a document imposing a qualification, condition, or restriction. [Middle English, from Medieval Latin prōvīsō (quod), provided (that), from Latin prōvīsō, ablative of prōvīsus, past participle of prōvidēre, to provide; see provide.]proviso (prəˈvaɪzəʊ) n, pl -sos or -soes1. a clause in a document or contract that embodies a condition or stipulation2. a condition or stipulation[C15: from Medieval Latin phrase prōvīsō quod it being provided that, from Latin prōvīsus provided]pro•vi•so (prəˈvaɪ zoʊ) n., pl. -sos, -soes. 1. a clause, as in a statute or contract, by which a condition is introduced. 2. a stipulation or condition. [1400–50; late Middle English < Medieval Latin prōvīsō, for prōvīsō (quod) it being provided (that), abl. neuter singular of Latin prōvīsus, past participle of prōvidēre to provide] ThesaurusNoun | 1. | proviso - a stipulated condition; "he accepted subject to one provision"provisionprecondition, stipulation, condition - an assumption on which rests the validity or effect of something else |
provisonoun condition, requirement, provision, strings, rider, restriction, qualification, clause, reservation, limitation, stipulation I accept, with the proviso that Jane agrees.provisonounA restricting or modifying element:condition, provision, qualification, reservation, specification, stipulation, term (often used in plural).Informal: string (often used in plural).Translationscondiciónconditionclausola condizionalecondizione
Proviso Related to Proviso: Wilmot ProvisoProvisoA condition, stipulation, or limitation inserted in a document. A condition or a provision in a deed, lease, mortgage, or contract, the performance or non-performance of which affects the validity of the instrument. It generally begins with the word provided. A proviso clause in a statute excepts something from statutory requirements, qualifies the statute, or excludes some potential area of misinterpretation. provison. a term or condition in a contract or title document. PROVISO. The name of a clause inserted in an act of the legislature, a deed, a written agreement, or other instrument, which generally contains a condition that a certain thing shall or shall not be done, in order that an agreement contained in another clause shall take effect. 2. It always implies a condition, unless subsequent words change it to a covenant; but when a proviso contains the mutual words of the parties to a deed, it amounts to a covenant. 2 Co. 72; Cro. Eliz. 242; Moore, 707 Com. on Cov. 105; Lilly's Reg. h.t.; 1 Lev. 155. 3. A proviso differs from an exception. 1 Barn. k Ald. 99. An exception exempts, absolutely, from the operation of an engagement or an enactment; a proviso defeats their operation, conditionally. An exception takes out of an engagement or enactment, something which would otherwise be part of the subject-matter of it; a proviso avoids them by way of defeasance or excuse. 8 Amer. Jurist, 242; Plowd. 361; Carter 99; 1 Saund. 234 a, note; Lilly's Reg. h.t.; and the cases there cited. Vide, generally Amer. Jurist, No. 16, art. 1; Bac. Ab. Conditions, A; Com. Dig. Condition, A 1, A 2; Darw. on Stat. 660. provisoenUS Related to proviso: Wilmot ProvisoSynonyms for provisonoun conditionSynonyms- condition
- requirement
- provision
- strings
- rider
- restriction
- qualification
- clause
- reservation
- limitation
- stipulation
Synonyms for provisonoun a restricting or modifying elementSynonyms- condition
- provision
- qualification
- reservation
- specification
- stipulation
- term
- string
Synonyms for provisonoun a stipulated conditionSynonymsRelated Words- precondition
- stipulation
- condition
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