- Look up
desuetude in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. In law,
desuetude (/dɪˈsjuːɪtjuːd, ˈdɛswɪ-/; from
French désuétude, from
Latin desuetudo 'outdated...
-
amended or repealed,
sunset provisions have a
specified expiration date.
Desuetude renders a law
invalid after long non-use. The
roots of
sunset provisions...
-
Commissioner H.N.
Davies recorded that
Zafar "is
evidently sinking from pure
desuetude and
paralysis in the
region of his throat". To
prepare for his
death Davies...
-
obsolete sense, to
indicate both its life span and the time
since its
desuetude, or to a
relatively recent use for
current ones. The
format of the OED's...
-
Richard Albert has
theorized a
related phenomenon he
calls "constitutional
desuetude",
which occurs "when an
entrenched constitutional provision loses its...
-
peaceful advocacy of a
republic is
protected speech.
Decriminalization Desuetude Expressive function of law
Statute Law
Revision Act
Unenforceable Victimless...
-
German Emperors,
Kings of
Saxony ,and
Grand Dukes of Baden, it fell into
desuetude as the
primary title of
members of any
reigning family. The
children of...
-
about twenty years ago, also
proved a failure, It has
again fallen into
desuetude and will
probably never be revived". However, the
trading resumed in the...
- in effect, in fact the "Blood Royal"
clause seems to have
fallen into
desuetude by 1917 when King
George V
limited the
style of
Royal Highness to children...
-
since 1814, last in 1927. Many
argue that
impeachment has
fallen into
desuetude. In
cases of impeachment, an
appointed court (Riksrett)
takes effect....