मारफ़त Meaning in English
मारफ़त शब्द का अंग्रेजी अर्थ : marfat
, cognizance
ऐसे ही कुछ और शब्द
सहवृद्धिकोगुलम्स
दंत चक्र
रतिक्रिया
सहवास interruptus
कोहेन
संजोग
जमावट
संसंजकता
संसंजक
कोहुन्स
चुरूट
कयल
काँयल
कुंडल
मारफ़त इसके अंग्रेजी अर्थ का उदाहरण
but was released on personal recognizance after Magistrate Judge Donald E.
The cognizance or proto-heraldic device of the family was a horse-shoe, a play on the Latin word ferrarius meaning a "worker in iron" (ferrum) thus a black-smith or farrier.
If the defendant is released without bail having been set, the defendants are released "on their own recognizance".
In April 1587, after Perrot's departure for England, Fitzgibbon was arrested by the government; the advice of Sir Anthony St Leger, to make him, "shorter by the length of his head" was not taken, and in 1589 he was released on heavy recognizances.
Keller was released from custody the same day on a personal recognizance bond (meaning that he was released without having to make any payment).
More cognizance of the fact that animal infections can become human infections, because humans are animals.
Release on recognizance is sometimes abbreviated as RoR, OR (own recognizance, particularly in the United States), or PR (personal recognizance).
Recognizances (Discharge into Exchequer) Act 1763 c.
After that, the payment delayed fourteen years to be paid after the English recognizance of the Brazilian Independence.
Arrangements for Eleanor's marriage to Lord Percy are found in the recognizance made in 1300 by Eleanor's father, Richard, Earl of Arundel, for a debt of 2,000 marks which he owed Sir Henry Percy.
A recognizance is subject to a "defeasance"; that is, the obligation will be avoided if person bound does some particular act, such as appearing in court on a particular day, or keeping the peace.
It is intended to provide a specialized judiciary tool that would take cognizance of such cases in an atmosphere totally different from that of other lawsuits.
Television producers from New York City Estreat (French estrait, Latin extracta) means, originally, a true copy or duplicate of some original writing or record; since the 1900s used only with reference to the enforcement of a forfeited recognizance.