significavit

significavit
sig·nif·i·ca·vit

English syllables. 2014.

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  • Significavit — Sig ni*fi*ca vit, n. [L., (he) has signified, perf. ind. of significare to signify.] (Eng. Eccl. Law) Formerly, a writ issuing out of chancery, upon certificate given by the ordinary, of a man s standing excommunicate by the space of forty days,… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Significavit — is an obsolete writ in English ecclesiastical law, issued out of chancery, that a man be excommunicated for forty days, and imprisoned until he submits himself to the authority of the church …   Wikipedia

  • significavit — (Ecclesiastical law.) A writ for the recaption of a person who had been excommunicated …   Ballentine's law dictionary

  • significavit — kävə̇t, kāv noun ( s) Etymology: Middle English, from Latin, he has signified (the first word in the writ), 3d per. singular perfect indicative of significare 1. a. : a bishop s certificate that a person has been in a state of excom …   Useful english dictionary

  • English words first attested in Chaucer — Contents 1 Etymology 2 List 2.1 Canterbury Tales General Prologue …   Wikipedia

  • DII — ingenii ab Unius notitia exerrantis figmentum, tot fuêre apud Gentiles, quot deprehendêrunt vel usui suo, vel terrori, vel admirationi apta instrumenta; omisso Eo, qui solus horum Auctor, naturâ suâ invisibilis, per visibilia haec sua opera ipsis …   Hofmann J. Lexicon universale

  • Sidney Faithorn Green — The Rev. Sidney Faithorn Green ( fl. 1865 1882) was a British clergyman who, during the Ritualist controversies in the Church of England, found himself imprisoned for three years for liturgical practice contrary to the Public Worship Regulation… …   Wikipedia

  • Anglicanism — • A term used to denote the religious belief and position of members of the established Church of England Catholic Encyclopedia. Kevin Knight. 2006. Anglicanism     Anglicanism      …   Catholic encyclopedia

  • Domicile — • The canon law has no independent and original theory of domicile; both the canon law and all modern civil codes borrowed this theory from the Roman law; the canon law, however, extended and perfected the Roman theory by adding thereto that of… …   Catholic encyclopedia

  • Novice — • The canonical Latin name of those who, having been regularly admitted into a religious order and ordinarily already confirmed in their higher vocation by a certain period of probation as postulants, are prepared by a series of exercises and… …   Catholic encyclopedia

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