Here you will find one or more explanations in English for the word Decer.
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DecernDecern De*cern", v. t. [L. decernere. See Decree.]
1. To perceive, discern, or decide. [Obs.] --Granmer.
2. (Scots Law) To decree; to adjudge. Decerniture
Decerniture De*cern"i*ture (?; 135), n. (Scots Law)
A decree or sentence of a court. --Stormonth.
Decerp
Decerp De*cerp", v. t. [L. decerpere; de- + carpere to pluck.]
To pluck off; to crop; to gather. [Obs.]
Decerpt
Decerpt De*cerpt", a. [L. decerptus, p. p. of decerpere.]
Plucked off or away. [Obs.]
Decerptible
Decerptible De*cerp"ti*ble, a.
That may be plucked off, cropped, or torn away. [Obs.]
--Bailey.
Decerption
Decerption De*cerp"tion, n.
1. The act of plucking off; a cropping.
2. That which is plucked off or rent away; a fragment; a
piece. --Glanvill.
Decertation
Decertation De`cer*ta"tion, n. [L. decertatio, fr. decertare,
decertatum; de- + certare to contend.]
Contest for mastery; contention; strife. [R.] --Arnway.
Meaning of Decer from wikipedia
- John Le
Decer (died 1332) was a fourteenth-century
Mayor of Dublin, who had a
notable record of
charitable works and
civic improvement.
Since the surname...
-
Dublin city families,
notably that of John Le
Decer, four
times Mayor of
Dublin between 1302 and 1326. Le
Decer was the
maternal grandfather of John de Meones...
- John Le
Decer 1303–1303
Geoffrey de
Morton 1304–1304 John Le
Seriaunt 1305–1305 John Le
Decer 1306–1306 John Le
Seriaunt 1307–1309 John Le
Decer 1309–1310...
- the
oldest stone bridge across the
Liffey since the
removal of John Le
Decer's 1308
bridge three miles downriver at
Salmon Leap.
Oakley Park, the current...
-
Colony of
Maryland 1634-1707 "The
Narrative of Coll.
Henry Darnall ... 31st
Decer 1689",
Proceedings of the
Council of Maryland, 1687/8-1693 [3] "In this...
- and
traders used to rub it for luck. It was
first mentioned when John Le
Decer,
Mayor of Dublin,
erected a
marble cistern to
supply drinking water in Cornmarket...
-
bridge across the
River Liffey was
built at his own
expense by John Le
Decer,
Mayor of Dublin, next to the gate of St. Wolstan's. In 1314 the churches...
-
Ballybough Bridge was
originally a
wooden structure built in 1313 by John Le
Decer,
three times Provost, or
Mayor of Dublin, and
shortly after its construction...
-
supply was
built there in 1308. It was
commonly called Le
Decer's Fountain, in
memory of John Le
Decer, four
times Mayor of Dublin, who paid for the construction...
- gave its name to the
still extant City ****embly House. 1280:
Robert le
Decer 1308:
William le
Deveneys 1332: John Callan,
William le
Walsh 1377: William...