bodily

  • 81bodily injury — Physical injury to a person caused by an accident …

    Dictionary of automotive terms

  • 82bodily harm — Physical injury to the person, especially injury by violent, hostile, and aggressive means. People v Moore (NY) 50 Hun 356, 358 …

    Ballentine's law dictionary

  • 83bodily heirs — Heirs of the body. Watson v WolffGoldman Realty Co. 95 Ark 18, 128 SW 581; children. 28 Am J Rev ed Est § 42; heirs of the body as distinguished from heirs by adoption. 2 Am J2d Adopt § 98. See heirs of the body …

    Ballentine's law dictionary

  • 84bodily infirmity — Something of a permanent, established, or settled character, that materially impairs, weakens, or undermines the constitution of a person, tends to reduce his powers of resistance, and thereby enhances the risk of death in case of injury. 29A Am… …

    Ballentine's law dictionary

  • 85bodily injuries — Personal injuries. Cormier v Hudson, 284 Mass 231, 187 NE 625, in various degrees of harm, Anno: 37 ALR2d 1087, resulting from an external cause, 29A Am J Rev ed Ins § 1168; but including, according to some authority, distress from a cause other… …

    Ballentine's law dictionary

  • 86bodily issue — Ordinarily words of limitation in a grant or devise, but they may be words of purchase, as where the grantor or testator had children living at the time of the grant and the context shows that the words were not used in a technical sense, but… …

    Ballentine's law dictionary

  • 87bodily fluid — noun the liquid parts of the body • Syn: ↑liquid body substance, ↑body fluid, ↑humor, ↑humour • Derivationally related forms: ↑humoral (for: ↑humor) …

    Useful english dictionary

  • 88bodily property — noun an attribute of the body • Hypernyms: ↑property • Hyponyms: ↑bipedalism, ↑laterality, ↑dominance, ↑physique, ↑build, ↑body build, ↑habi …

    Useful english dictionary

  • 89bodily oath — noun : corporal oath …

    Useful english dictionary

  • 90Grievous bodily harm — For other uses, see Grievous Bodily Harm (disambiguation). Grievous bodily harm (often abbreviated to GBH) is a term of art used in English criminal law which has become synonymous with the offences that are created by sections 18 and 20 of the… …

    Wikipedia