- custom or
customs in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. Custom, customary, or
consuetudinary may
refer to:
Convention (norm), a set of agreed, sti****ted or generally...
- "what has
always been done and
accepted by law".
Customary law (also,
consuetudinary or
unofficial law)
exists where: a
certain legal practice is observed...
-
vincit communem legem (custom
overrules the
common law); see also:
Consuetudinary.
consummatum est It is completed. The last
words of
Jesus on the cross...
-
Aragonese justice and decision-making
system was
based on
Pyrenean consuetudinary law, the King was
considered primus inter pares ('first
among equals')...
-
Consuetudines monasticae,
Volumes 1-2, 1900–1905. A
collection of
Benedictine consuetudinaries. In Latin. E. Martène, De
antiquis Ecclesiæ ritibus. A
collection of...
- 1199–1200. The new king
upheld their institutional system issued from the
consuetudinary law
prevalent in
Basque and
Pyrenean territories. This
limited self-government...
-
gathered together after his time,
divided roughly into two parts: the "
Consuetudinary" (Rolls Series, 1–185, and in Rock, vol. III, 1–110),
styled "De Officiis...
- of a
Benedictine abbot in
medieval times is thus
prescribed by the
consuetudinary of Abingdon. The
newly elected abbot was to put off his
shoes at the...
-
vincit communem legem (custom
overrules the
common law); see also:
Consuetudinary.
consummatum est It is completed. The last
words of
Jesus on the cross...
- were
freed and
purchased by
family members or
allied whites. It was a
consuetudinary act in
Spanish America; it
allowed the
appearance of a
large po****tion...