excuss
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Excuss — Ex*cuss , v. t. [L. excussus. p. p. of excutere to shake off; ex out, from + quatere to shake. Cf. {Quash}.] 1. To shake off; to discard. [R.] [1913 Webster] To excuss the notation of a Geity out of their minds. Bp. Stillingfleet. [1913 Webster]… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
excuss — excussion, n. /ik skus /, v.t. Law. to take possession of (goods) by legal authority. [1560 70; < L excussus, ptp. of excutere to shake out, drive out, send forth, equiv. to ex EX 1 + cussus, comb. form of quassus, ptp. of quatere to shake;… … Universalium
excuss — v. get rid of, discard; seize by law (goods or property); examine, inspect; investigate; decipher … English contemporary dictionary
excuss — ex·cuss … English syllables
excuss — To seize and detain by law … Black's law dictionary
excuss — To seize and detain by law … Black's law dictionary
excuss — To seize goods under process of a court … Ballentine's law dictionary
excuss — ikˈskəs, ek transitive verb ( ed/ ing/ es) Etymology: Latin excussus, past participle of excutere, from ex ex (I) + cutere (from quatere to shake) more at quash 1. obsolete : to shake off or … Useful english dictionary
Exception — (v. lat.), 1) so v.w. Ausnahme; daher Exceptionsgesetze, in Widerspruch mit den Grundgesetzen, zur Erreichung besonderer Zwecke auf eine bestimmte Zeit erlassene Verordnungen. Exceptionell, eine Ausnahme enthaltend; Exceptiv, ausnehmend,… … Pierer's Universal-Lexikon
excussio — /ek skush ee oh /, n. Civil Law. the exhausting of every remedy against a principal debtor before proceeding against a surety. [ < LL excussio. See EXCUSS, ION] * * * … Universalium