slovo | definícia |
accresce (gcide) | accresce \ac*cresce"\ ([a^]k*kr[e^]s"), v. i. [L. accrescere.
See Accrue.]
1. To accrue. [R.]
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2. To increase; to grow. [Obs.] --Gillespie.
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| podobné slovo | definícia |
accresce (gcide) | accresce \ac*cresce"\ ([a^]k*kr[e^]s"), v. i. [L. accrescere.
See Accrue.]
1. To accrue. [R.]
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2. To increase; to grow. [Obs.] --Gillespie.
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accrescence (gcide) | accrescence \ac*cres"cence\ ([a^]k*kr[e^]s"sens), n. [LL.
accrescentia.]
Continuous growth; an accretion. [R.]
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The silent accrescence of belief from the unwatched
depositions of a general, never contradicted hearsy.
--Coleridge.
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accrescent (gcide) | accrescent \ac*cres"cent\ ([a^]k*kr[e^]s"sent), a. [L.
accrescens, -entis, p. pr. of accrescere; ad + crescere to
grow. See Crescent.]
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1. Growing; increasing. --Shuckford.
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2. (Bot.) Growing larger after flowering. --Gray.
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JUS ACCRESCENDI (bouvier) | JUS ACCRESCENDI. The right of survivorship.
2. At common law, when one of several joint tenants died, the entire
tenancy or estate went to the survivors, and so on to the last survivor, who
took an estate of inheritance. This right, except in estates held in trust,
has been abolished by statute in Alabama, Delaware, Georgia, Illinois,
Indiana, Kentucky, Michigan, Missouri Mississippi, New York, North Carolina,
Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Tennessee, and Virginia. Grif. Reg. h.t.; 1
Hill. Ab. 439, 440. In Connecticut, 1 Root, Rep. 48; 1 Swift's Dig. 102. In
Louisiana, this right was never recognized. See 11 Serg. & R. 192; 2 Caines,
Cas. Err. 326; 3 Verm. 543; 6 Monr. R. 15; Estate in common; Estate in joint
tenancy.
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