slovo | definícia |
day book (encz) | day book, n: |
day book (wn) | day book
n 1: the daily written record of events (as arrests) in a police
station [syn: blotter, day book, police blotter, {rap
sheet}, charge sheet] |
DAY BOOK (bouvier) | DAY BOOK, mer. law. An account book, in which merchants and others make
entries of their daily transactions. This is generally a book of original
entries, and as such may be given in evidence to prove the sale and
delivery, of merchandise or of work done.
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| podobné slovo | definícia |
Domesday Book (gcide) | Domesday \Domes"day`\, n.
A day of judgment. See Doomsday. [Obs.]
[1913 Webster]
Domesday Book, the ancient record of the survey of most of
the lands of England, made by order of William the
Conqueror, about 1086. It consists of two volumes, a large
folio and a quarto, and gives the proprietors' tenures,
arable land, woodland, etc. [Written also {Doomsday
Book}.]
[1913 Webster] |
Doomsday Book (gcide) | Domesday \Domes"day`\, n.
A day of judgment. See Doomsday. [Obs.]
[1913 Webster]
Domesday Book, the ancient record of the survey of most of
the lands of England, made by order of William the
Conqueror, about 1086. It consists of two volumes, a large
folio and a quarto, and gives the proprietors' tenures,
arable land, woodland, etc. [Written also {Doomsday
Book}.]
[1913 Webster]Doomsday \Dooms"day`\, n. [AS. d?mes d[=a]g. See Doom, and
Day.]
1. A day of sentence or condemnation; day of death. "My
body's doomsday." --Shak.
[1913 Webster]
2. The day of the final judgment.
[1913 Webster]
I could not tell till doomsday. --Chaucer.
[1913 Webster]
Doomsday Book. See Domesday Book.
[1913 Webster] |
domesday book (wn) | Domesday Book
n 1: record of a British census and land survey in 1085-1086
ordered by William the Conqueror [syn: Domesday Book,
Doomsday Book] |
doomsday book (wn) | Doomsday Book
n 1: record of a British census and land survey in 1085-1086
ordered by William the Conqueror [syn: Domesday Book,
Doomsday Book] |
DAY BOOK (bouvier) | DAY BOOK, mer. law. An account book, in which merchants and others make
entries of their daily transactions. This is generally a book of original
entries, and as such may be given in evidence to prove the sale and
delivery, of merchandise or of work done.
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