slovo | definícia |
AGISTE (bouvier) | AGISTER. One who takes horses or other animals to agist.
2. The agister is not, like an innkeeper, bound to take all horses
offered to him, nor is he liable for any injury done to such animals in his
care, unless he has been guilty of negligence, or from his ignorance,
negligence may be inferred. Holt's R. 457.
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| podobné slovo | definícia |
magisterial (encz) | magisterial,autoritativní adj: Zdeněk Brožmagisterial,diktátorský adj: Zdeněk Brož |
magisterially (encz) | magisterially,autoritativně adv: Zdeněk Brož |
Agister (gcide) | Agister \A*gist"er\, Agistor \A*gist"or\, n. [Anglo-Norman
agistour.] (Law)
(a) Formerly, an officer of the king's forest, who had the
care of cattle agisted, and collected the money for the
same; -- hence called gisttaker, which in England is
corrupted into guest-taker.
(b) Now, one who agists or takes in cattle to pasture at a
certain rate; a pasturer. --Mozley & W.
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Magister (gcide) | Magister \Ma*gis"ter\, n. [L. See Master.]
Master; sir; -- a title of the Middle Ages, given to a person
in authority, or to one having a license from a university to
teach philosophy and the liberal arts.
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Magisterial (gcide) | Magisterial \Mag`is*te"ri*al\, a. [L. magisterius magisterial.
See Master.]
1. Of or pertaining to a master or magistrate, or one in
authority; having the manner of a magister; official;
commanding; authoritative. Hence: Overbearing;
dictatorial; dogmatic.
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When magisterial duties from his home
Her father called. --Glover.
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We are not magisterial in opinions, nor,
dictator-like, obtrude our notions on any man. --Sir
T. Browne.
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Pretenses go a great way with men that take fair
words and magisterial looks for current payment.
--L'Estrange.
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2. (Alchem. & Old Chem.) Pertaining to, produced by, or of
the nature of, magistery. See Magistery, 2.
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Syn: Authoritative; stately; august; pompous; dignified;
lofty; commanding; imperious; lordly; proud; haughty;
domineering; despotic; dogmatical; arrogant.
Usage: Magisterial, Dogmatical, Arrogant. One who is
magisterial assumes the air of a master toward his
pupils; one who is dogmatical lays down his positions
in a tone of authority or dictation; one who is
arrogant insults others by an undue assumption of
superiority. Those who have long been teachers
sometimes acquire, unconsciously, a manner which
borders too much on the magisterial, and may be
unjustly construed as dogmatical, or even arrogant.
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Magisteriality (gcide) | Magisteriality \Mag`is*te`ri*al"i*ty\, n.
Magisterialness; authoritativeness. [R.] --Fuller.
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Magisterially (gcide) | Magisterially \Mag`is*te"ri*al*ly\, adv.
In a magisterial manner.
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Magisterialness (gcide) | Magisterialness \Mag`is*te"ri*al*ness\, n.
The quality or state of being magisterial.
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Magistery (gcide) | Magistery \Mag"is*ter*y\, n. [L. magisterium the office of a
chief, president, director, tutor. See Magistrate.]
1. Mastery; powerful medical influence; renowned efficacy; a
sovereign remedy. [Obs.] --Holland.
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2. A magisterial injunction. [R.] --Brougham.
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3. (Chem.) A precipitate; a fine substance deposited by
precipitation; -- applied in old chemistry to certain
white precipitates from metallic solutions; as, magistery
of bismuth. --Ure.
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artium magister (wn) | Artium Magister
n 1: a master's degree in arts and sciences [syn: {Master of
Arts}, MA, Artium Magister, AM] |
cancer magister (wn) | Cancer magister
n 1: small edible crab of Pacific coast of North America [syn:
Dungeness crab, Cancer magister] |
magisterial (wn) | magisterial
adj 1: of or relating to a magistrate; "official magisterial
functions"
2: offensively self-assured or given to exercising usually
unwarranted power; "an autocratic person"; "autocratic
behavior"; "a bossy way of ordering others around"; "a rather
aggressive and dominating character"; "managed the employees
in an aloof magisterial way"; "a swaggering peremptory
manner" [syn: autocratic, bossy, dominating, {high-and-
mighty}, magisterial, peremptory]
3: used of a person's appearance or behavior; befitting an
eminent person; "his distinguished bearing"; "the monarch's
imposing presence"; "she reigned in magisterial beauty" [syn:
distinguished, grand, imposing, magisterial] |
magisterially (wn) | magisterially
adv 1: in an overbearingly domineering manner; as a dictator;
"this manager acts dictatorially toward his colleagues"
[syn: dictatorially, autocratically, magisterially]
2: in an authoritative and magisterial manner; "she spoke
authoritatively" [syn: authoritatively, magisterially] |
MAGISTER (bouvier) | MAGISTER. A master, a ruler, one whose learning and position makes him
superior to others, thus: one who has attained to a high degree, or
eminence, in science and literature, is called a master; as, master of arts.
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MAGISTER AD FACULTATES (bouvier) | MAGISTER AD FACULTATES, Eng. eccl. law. The title of an officer who grants
dispensations; as, to marry, to eat flesh on days prohibited, and the like.
Bac. Ab. Eccl. Courts, A 5.
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MAGISTER NAVIS (bouvier) | MAGISTER NAVIS. The master of a ship; a sea captain.
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MAGISTER SOCIETATIS (bouvier) | MAGISTER SOCIETATIS, Civil law. The principal manager of the business of a
society or partnership.
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