The act of demeaning the court, preventig justice adminstration, or disobeying a sentence of the court. It is criminal and can lead to fines or imprisonment .
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CONTEMPTIBILITER
Lat Contemptuously. In old English law . Contempt, contempts. Fleta, lib. 2, c. 60,
CONTENT
1.the words of a document. It can be information or just communicatin. It has to have readability, freshness, usefullness,and be relevant in the way it is shown. 2. The meaning […]
CONTENT ANALYSIS
1. Seeing how a firm can get more promotion from news or brand name menion. 2. using the answers to open questions with numbers to see the different possible answers.
CONTENT MANAGEMENT SYSTEM (CMS)
Software that can upload and manage content on a website. It can regulate content, user visits, links used, and other website elements. It lets the less savy have a website […]
CONTENT PROVIDER
A business that gives graphics and text for articles. It is used for publications or a website to make it catch the eye of the reader.
CONTENT RELATED VALIDITY (CRV)
Seeing if the test used on employees is valid. The details of the test are looked at to see if it is appropriate for the job at hand. Refer to […]
CONTENTION
This means an assertion or a claim about something.
CONTENTIOUS
This term applies to something that can be contested or is argumentative .
CONTENTIOUS JURISDICTION
In English ecclesiastical law . That branch of the jurisdiction of the ecclesiastical courts which is exercised upon adversary or contentious proceedings .
CONTENTIOUS POSSESSION
In stating the rule that the possession of land necessary to give rise to a title by prescription must be a ” contentious ” one, it is meant that it […]
CONTENTMENT, CONTENEMENT
A man’s countenance or credit, which he ‘has together with, and by reason of, his freehold; or that which is necessary for the support and maintenance of men, agreeably to […]
CONTENTS
The contents of a promissory note or other commercial instrument or chose in action means the specific sum named therein and payable by the terms of the Instrument. Trading Co. […]
CONTENTS AND NOT CONTENTS
In parliamentary law . The “contents” are those who, in the house of lords, express assent to a bill; the “not” or “non contents” dissent. May, Pari. Law, cc. 12, […]
CONTENTS RATE
The premium rate charged for a building’s conent not the building itself.
CONTENTS UNKNOWN
Words sometimes annexed to a bill of lading of goods in cases. Their meaning is that the master only means to acknowledge the shipment, in good order, of the cases, […]
CONTERMINOUS
Adjacent; adjoining ; having a common boundary; coterminous
CONTEST
To make defense to an adverse claim in a court of law ; to oppose, resist, or dispute the case made by a plaintiff. Pratt v. Breckinridge, 112 Ky. 1, […]
CONTESTABLE MARKET
A market that lets entry or exit occur at any time. It has a few businesses in this market leaving room for new members. If some profit is made than […]
CONTESTABLE PERIOD
The time when a contact is valid to be challenged. For insurance its two years.
CONTESTATIO LITIS
In Roman law. Contestation of suit ; the framing an issue; joinder in issue . The formal act of both the parties with which the proceedings in jure were closed […]
CONTESTATION OF SUIT
In an ecclesiastical cause, that stage of the suit which is reached when the defendant has answered the libel by giving in an allegation.
CONTEXT
The context of a particular sentence or clause in a statute, contract, will, etc., comprises those parts of the text which immediately precede and follow it. The context may sometimes […]
CONTEXT SENSITIVITY
1. how a help program can assist the user in their use of a program. 2. how the management gets results based on history and experience.
CONTIGUOUS
In close proximity; in actual close contact Touching; bounded or traversed by. The term is not synonymous with “vicinal.” Plaster Co. v. Campbell, 89 Va. 396, 16 S. E 274; […]