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1 derogation
dero·ga·tion[ˌderə(ʊ)ˈgeɪʃən, AM -rəˈ-]n no plhis rude acts were a \derogation of his rank of colonel sein rüdes Verhalten war eine Schande für seinen Rang als Oberst* * *["derə'geISən]n (formof power, dignity etc) Beeinträchtigung f, Schmälerung f, Abbruch m ( of, from gen)* * *1. Beeinträchtigung f, Schmälerung f:2. Herabsetzung f (to gen)3. JUR teilweise Aufhebung (of, to gen)* * *n.Beeinträchtigung f.Verminderung f. -
2 derogation
derogation 1. LAW Ausnahmebestimmung f; Beeinträchtigung f (from a privilege); 2. GEN, LAW, POL Abweichung f
См. также в других словарях:
derogation from grant — In the context of landlord and tenant, where a landlord has taken steps or granted another party rights which render the premises unfit or unsuitable for the purpose for which they were let. The principle is limited: it does not offer protection… … Law dictionary
Doctrine of non-derogation from grants — The doctrine of non derogation from grants is a principle of the law of England and Wales. As the House of Lords explained in British Leyland Motor Corp. v. Armstrong Patents Co., it states that a seller of realty or goods is not permitted to… … Wikipedia
derogation from grant — Provision in an instrument of transfer such as a deed which diminishes or militates against the grant itself … Black's law dictionary
derogation from grant — Provision in an instrument of transfer such as a deed which diminishes or militates against the grant itself … Black's law dictionary
derogation — UK US /ˌderəˈɡeɪʃən/ noun [C or U] FORMAL LAW ► special permission not to obey a rule, law, etc.: »It is possible to obtain derogation from certain Stock Exchange requirements but this must be applied for in the early stages of a transaction … Financial and business terms
Derogation — • The partial revocation of a law, as opposed to abrogation or the total abolition of a law Catholic Encyclopedia. Kevin Knight. 2006. Derogation Derogation … Catholic encyclopedia
derogation — der·o·ga·tion /ˌder ə gā shən/ n [Latin derogatio partial abrogation of a law, from derogare to detract from the force of (a law)]: a taking away or detraction from something (as the force of a law) the executive was without power to act in… … Law dictionary
Derogation — Der o*ga tion, n. [L. derogatio: cf. F. d[ e]rogation.] 1. The act of derogating, partly repealing, or lessening in value; disparagement; detraction; depreciation; followed by of, from, or to. [1913 Webster] I hope it is no derogation to the… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Derogation — is the partial revocation of a law, as opposed to abrogation or the total abolition of a law. The term is used in both civil law and common law. It is sometimes used, loosely, to mean abrogation, as in the legal maxim: Lex posterior derogat… … Wikipedia
derogation — mid 15c., from O.Fr. dérogacion (14c.), from L. derogationem (nom. derogatio), noun of action from pp. stem of derogare (see DEROGATORY (Cf. derogatory)) … Etymology dictionary
derogation — derogate ► VERB formal 1) (derogate from) detract from. 2) (derogate from) deviate from. 3) disparage. DERIVATIVES derogation noun. ORIGIN Latin derogare abrogate … English terms dictionary