- clerico admittendo
- A writ commanding a bishop to admit a clergyman to a living.
Ballentine's law dictionary. Anderson, W.S.. 1998.
Ballentine's law dictionary. Anderson, W.S.. 1998.
clerico admittendo — /klehrakow aedmatendow/ See admittendo clerico … Black's law dictionary
clerico admittendo — /klehrakow aedmatendow/ See admittendo clerico … Black's law dictionary
de clerico admittendo — /diy klehrakow zedmatendow/ See admittendo clerico … Black's law dictionary
de clerico admittendo — /diy klehrakow zedmatendow/ See admittendo clerico … Black's law dictionary
de clerico admittendo — For admitting the clerk. A writ of execution which was directed to the bishop or archbishop, not to the sheriff, requiring the admission and institution of the clerk presented by the patron who had recovered in a quare impedit, or assize of… … Ballentine's law dictionary
admittendo clerico — /aedmatendow klerakow/ An old English writ issuing to the bishop to establish the right of the Crown to make a presentation to a benefice. A writ of execution upon a right of presentation to a benefice being recovered in quare impedit, addressed… … Black's law dictionary
admittendo clerico — /aedmatendow klerakow/ An old English writ issuing to the bishop to establish the right of the Crown to make a presentation to a benefice. A writ of execution upon a right of presentation to a benefice being recovered in quare impedit, addressed… … Black's law dictionary
admittendo clerico — A writ to enforce a judgment determining the king s right of making a presentation to a benefice … Ballentine's law dictionary
de admittendo clerico — A writ commanding a bishop to admit to a living a clergyman who had been regularly appointed thereto … Ballentine's law dictionary
List of Latin phrases (C) — This page lists direct English translations of Latin phrases, such as veni vidi vici and et cetera. Some of the phrases are themselves translations of Greek phrases, as Greek rhetoric and literature reached its peak centuries before that of… … Wikipedia