Value | Position | |
---|---|---|
Position | 2 | 2 |
Accepted meanings | 15262 | 2 |
Obtained votes | 125 | 2 |
Votes by meaning | 0.01 | 7 |
Inquiries | 446357 | 3 |
Queries by meaning | 29 | 7 |
Feed + Pdf |
"Statistics updated on 5/19/2024 12:54:50 PM"
It is said of a marriage between people of different social rank, especially members of the nobility with commoners. In principle it was a limitation, since these unions had to be authorized by some higher entity (such as the king) and the purpose was to prevent the goods and titles of a nobleman from passing into the hands of his spouse. Although the etymology is Latin (morganaticum), it is a late voice taken from the Germanic morgangeba, which was the name for the dowry left by the husband to his wife in case he became a widow.
1o_ Although it is not a technical voice, it is associated with taxonomy because it can name the breed, species, gender of an animal. When it comes to people it is derogatory, even when it comes to their lineage or caste. Perhaps for the latter it is confused with runfla, mersa, caterva, which are "low ralea". 2nd_ Second (such as 'you' ) and third (such as 'he/she') persons in singular of the present indicative mode, and second (as 'you') person in singular of the imperative for the verb ralear . See verbs/ralea .
In a contract where an external eventuality is envisaged that harms one of the parties, but at the time of signing it cannot be assessed as soon as , a 'revision clause' is used by which on an agreed date a part of the contract is renegotiated to adjust it to the new circumstance, which will already be known to both parties.