- Nemo dat quod non habet,
literally meaning "no one can give what they do not have", is a
legal rule,
sometimes called the nemo dat rule, that
states that...
-
aquae effusae sunt largissimae, ita ut
cunctus exercitus sufficienter haberet. d'Alviella (1891), pp. 106-107 Schröder (1892): p.81,
lines 129-131 Schröder...
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Retrieved 2
December 2024. "Galatasaray'ı değil çocukluk aşkını seçti".
haberet.com (in Turkish).
Retrieved 31 July 2023. "Mert Müldür'ün
sevgilisi Koprena...
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purple and gold over his tomb" (et ut
regia viri
sancti persona memoriam haberet aeternam,
vexillum eius
super tumbam auro et
purpura conpositum adposuerunt)...
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amicos [Augustus]
dixit duas
habere se
filias delicatas, quas
necesse haberet ferre, rem
publicam et Iuliam. Macrobius,
Saturnalia 2.5 Suetonius, Life...
- (<
older ară, are)
allegedly comes from the
imperfect subjunctive (3sg '
habēret and 3pl habērent); and aș (<
older ași)
continues Latin pluperfect subjunctive...
- debtor. The rule nemo plus
iuris ad
alium transferre potest quam ipse
haberet applies to the
cession of claims. The
cedent cannot cede the same claim...
- in Bīthȳniam
miserunt quī ab rēge peterent, nē inimīcissimum suum se****
haberet sibique dēderet. (Nepos) "The
senators ... sent amb****adors to Bithynia...
- the king (the
subject of
habēret): lēgātōs in Bīthȳniam mīsērunt, quī ab rēge peterent, nē inimīcissimum suum sē****
habēret sibīque dēderet (Nepos) 'they...
- clause):
idque sīc aedificāverat ut in
omnibus partibus aedificiī exitūs
habēret (Nepos) 'and he had
built it in such a way that in all
parts of the building...