GLOSSARY ENTRY (DERIVED FROM QUESTION BELOW) | ||||||
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15:32 Nov 5, 2007 |
English language (monolingual) [PRO] Law/Patents - Certificates, Diplomas, Licenses, CVs / Marriage Certificate | |||||||
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| Selected response from: Marina Lara Petersen Local time: 02:24 | ||||||
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SUMMARY OF ALL EXPLANATIONS PROVIDED | ||||
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5 +1 | to wit (scilicet) |
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4 +1 | more particularly |
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3 | sworn statement |
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3 | for info (in support of Kim's and Marina's answers) |
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Discussion entries: 5 | |
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ss: sworn statement Explanation: or social security (number) Bieber's Dictionary of Legal Abbreviations: A Reference Guide for ... - Google Books Result by Mary Miles Prince - 2001 - Law Example sentence(s):
Reference: http://books.google.com/books?isbn=1575884089... |
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ss: more particularly Explanation: No one (including lawyers) seems to know for sure what ss really stands for. There are many theories. I think Margaret Marks sums it up nicely: the abbreviation is used simply because it's been used for decades on affidavits, certificates, sworn statements, etc. I think the translation of the Latin scilicet as "more particularly" makes the best sense in your case. The statement was made in Nevada and more particularly, more specifically in the county of Clark. "The explanation that Margaret Marks, from whom I take this item, tentatively prefers ... is what Bryan Garner says in Dictionary of Modern Legal Usage: that it was entered once in error and then copied again and again over the centuries." http://www.languagehat.com/archives/001140.php In most cases, all of the acts of a notary must include a venue, or official listing of the place where they happened, usually in the form of the state and county, with the abbreviation "ss" for the Latin scilicet, "more particularly," often in this form: State of .......) )ss: County of.......) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Notary_public |
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ss: to wit (scilicet) Explanation: SS. An abbreviation used in that part of a record, pleading, or affidavit, called the "statement of the venue". Commonly translated or read, "to-wit", and supposed to be a contraction of "scilicet". -------------------------------------------------- Note added at 37 minutos (2007-11-05 16:09:11 GMT) -------------------------------------------------- ss Scilicet (Latin: to Wit, Namely) http://acronyms.thefreedictionary.com/ss -------------------------------------------------- Note added at 8 horas (2007-11-06 00:05:48 GMT) -------------------------------------------------- SS. An abbreviation used in that part of a record, pleading, or affidavit, called the "statement of the venue". Commonly translated or read, "to-wit", and supposed to be a contraction of "scilicet". << Black's Law Dictionary >> ss: An abbreviation meaning "to wit" or "namely", used most often in the caption of affidavits, for example: State of Illinois ) ) ) ss ) County of Cook ) << Ballentine's Legal Dictionary and Thesaurus. Jonathan S. Lynton. >> |
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ss: for info (in support of Kim's and Marina's answers) Explanation: A nice example of this can be found at www.co.eureka.nv.us/clerk/1-06-06 Comm Minutes.pdf Logically, the three parentheses [ ) ] could be replace by a single curly bracket [ } ], especially if it brackets all three lines of the venue information. -------------------------------------------------- Note added at 8 hrs (2007-11-06 00:30:34 GMT) -------------------------------------------------- Sorry, the above ref has only two parentheses. The following one has three (see under ACKNOWLEDGEMENT): http://www.secinfo.com/d1zvTx.65.8.htm |
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