- voluntas
- Will; intent; intention; a will; a testament.
Ballentine's law dictionary. Anderson, W.S.. 1998.
Ballentine's law dictionary. Anderson, W.S.. 1998.
voluntas — (izg. volùntas) DEFINICIJA ob. u: SINTAGMA voluntas legis (izg. voluntas lȇgis) volja zakona; voluntas ultima (izg. voluntas ȕltima) posljednja volja, oporuka ETIMOLOGIJA lat … Hrvatski jezični portal
Voluntas — (lat.), Wille. V. unilateralis, so v.w. Einseitiger Wille … Pierer's Universal-Lexikon
voluntas — index inclination, volition, will (desire) Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
voluntas — (s.f.) L obiettivo che si propone l oratore. consilium, bona voluntas, mala voluntas … Dizionario di retorica par stefano arduini & matteo damiani
Voluntas — International Journal of Voluntary and Nonprofit Organisations; wissenschaftliche Fachzeitschrift des ⇡ Nonprofit Sektors. V. ist das offizielle Publikationsorgan der ⇡ International Society of Third Sector Research (ISTR) und versteht sich als… … Lexikon der Economics
Voluntas — Vo|lun|tas [vɔ lunta:s] die; <aus gleichbed. lat. voluntas> (veraltet) Wille, Wunsch … Das große Fremdwörterbuch
Voluntas superior est intellectu — (лат.) воля превыше разума (Дунс Скот). Философский энциклопедический словарь. М.: Советская энциклопедия. Гл. редакция: Л. Ф. Ильичёв, П. Н. Федосеев, С. М. Ковалёв, В. Г. Панов. 1983 … Философская энциклопедия
Voluntas necandi — In jurisprudence, voluntas necandi (Latin voluntas , will + gerund of neco , to kill ) describes the animus nocendi of a person who willfully kills another human being. Establishment of voluntas necandi is necessary to prove murder or voluntary… … Wikipedia
voluntas ordinata — noun the position (opinion) that while God has the power to do anything, once he choses to do some thing, he ends his ability to do otherwise. Contrast voluntas simplex … Wiktionary
Voluntas — * Sie ist bone voluntatis. (S. ⇨ Gasse 27.) – Franck, II, 62b … Deutsches Sprichwörter-Lexikon
voluntas — /valantss/ Lat. Properly, volition, purpose, or intention, or a design or the feeling or impulse which prompts the commission of an act. However, in old English law the term was often used to denote a will, that is, the last will and testament of … Black's law dictionary