| slovo | definícia |  
deliverance (encz) | deliverance,osvobození	n:		Zdeněk Brož |  
deliverance (encz) | deliverance,vykoupení	n:		Zdeněk Brož |  
deliverance (encz) | deliverance,vysvobození	n:		Zdeněk Brož |  
Deliverance (gcide) | Deliverance \De*liv"er*ance\, n. [F. d['e]livrance, fr.
    d['e]livrer.]
    1. The act of delivering or freeing from restraint,
       captivity, peril, and the like; rescue; as, the
       deliverance of a captive.
       [1913 Webster]
 
             He hath sent me to heal the broken-hearted, to
             preach deliverance to the captives.   --Luke iv. 18.
       [1913 Webster]
 
             One death or one deliverance we will share.
                                                   --Dryden.
       [1913 Webster]
 
    2. Act of bringing forth children. [Archaic] --Shak.
       [1913 Webster]
 
    3. Act of speaking; utterance. [Archaic] --Shak.
       [1913 Webster]
 
    Note: In this and in the preceding sense delivery is the word
          more commonly used.
          [1913 Webster]
 
    4. The state of being delivered, or freed from restraint.
       [1913 Webster]
 
             I do desire deliverance from these officers. --Shak.
       [1913 Webster]
 
    5. Anything delivered or communicated; esp., an opinion or
       decision expressed publicly. [Scot.]
       [1913 Webster]
 
    6. (Metaph.) Any fact or truth which is decisively attested
       or intuitively known as a psychological or philosophical
       datum; as, the deliverance of consciousness.
       [1913 Webster] |  
deliverance (wn) | deliverance
     n 1: recovery or preservation from loss or danger; "work is the
          deliverance of mankind"; "a surgeon's job is the saving of
          lives" [syn: rescue, deliverance, delivery, saving] |  
DELIVERANCE (bouvier) | DELIVERANCE, Practice. A term used by the clerk in court to every prisoner 
 who is arraigned and pleads not guilty to whom he wishes a good deliverance. 
 In modern practice this is seldom used. 
 
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  | | podobné slovo | definícia |  
Deliverance (gcide) | Deliverance \De*liv"er*ance\, n. [F. d['e]livrance, fr.
    d['e]livrer.]
    1. The act of delivering or freeing from restraint,
       captivity, peril, and the like; rescue; as, the
       deliverance of a captive.
       [1913 Webster]
 
             He hath sent me to heal the broken-hearted, to
             preach deliverance to the captives.   --Luke iv. 18.
       [1913 Webster]
 
             One death or one deliverance we will share.
                                                   --Dryden.
       [1913 Webster]
 
    2. Act of bringing forth children. [Archaic] --Shak.
       [1913 Webster]
 
    3. Act of speaking; utterance. [Archaic] --Shak.
       [1913 Webster]
 
    Note: In this and in the preceding sense delivery is the word
          more commonly used.
          [1913 Webster]
 
    4. The state of being delivered, or freed from restraint.
       [1913 Webster]
 
             I do desire deliverance from these officers. --Shak.
       [1913 Webster]
 
    5. Anything delivered or communicated; esp., an opinion or
       decision expressed publicly. [Scot.]
       [1913 Webster]
 
    6. (Metaph.) Any fact or truth which is decisively attested
       or intuitively known as a psychological or philosophical
       datum; as, the deliverance of consciousness.
       [1913 Webster] |  
Redeliverance (gcide) | Redeliverance \Re`de*liv"er*ance\ (-ans), n.
    A second deliverance.
    [1913 Webster] |  
DELIVERANCE (bouvier) | DELIVERANCE, Practice. A term used by the clerk in court to every prisoner 
 who is arraigned and pleads not guilty to whom he wishes a good deliverance. 
 In modern practice this is seldom used. 
 
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SECOND DELIVERANCE (bouvier) | SECOND DELIVERANCE, practice. The name of a writ given by statute of 
 Westminster the second, 13 Edw. 1. c. 2, founded on the record of a former 
 action of replevin. 2 Inst. 341. It commands the sheriff, if the plaintiff 
 make him secure of prosecuting his claim, and returning the chattels which 
 were adjudged to the defendant by reason of the plaintiff's default, to make 
 deliverance. On being nonsuited, the plaintiff in replevin might, at common 
 law, have brought another replevin, and so in infinitum, to the intolerable 
 vexation of the defendant. The statute of Westminster restrains the 
 plaintiff When nonsuited from so doing, but allows him this writ, issuing 
 out of the original record, in order to have the same distress delivered 
 again to him, on his giving the like security as before. 3 Bl. Com. 150,; 
 Hamm. N. P. 495; F. N. B. 68; 19 Vin. Ab. 1. 
 
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