xml:lang="en" lang="en" dir="ltr">

Transcribe Bentham: A Collaborative Initiative

From Transcribe Bentham: Transcription Desk

Keep up to date with the latest news - subscribe to the Transcribe Bentham newsletter; Find a new page to transcribe in our list of Untranscribed Manuscripts

JB/078/060/001

Jump to: navigation, search
Completed

Click Here To Edit

1826. Decr. 8

Review of Humphreys. Ch Agenda
§ Form & Matter?
Anti-ambiguity matter

1. This statute. 2. Miscollective.

[+] ? Matter specially applied to the exclusion of ambiguity.
as contradistinguished from general indeterminateness

Seats of ambiguity two: to the locatiolocutious Chamber. 2. collocation
given to them. Distinguishable Locutors are 1. Single Single-worded M of the terms discriminations
2. poly or say composed ormany-worded term denominations. 3. Im
in the preparation in the logical . 3 in any
one ofwhich proposition more than one may be included. 4 paragraphs.


Go on
(1)
Collation - is not a
light matter? Is it
without effect on practice?
Collocative is it a
matter of small importance
with a view
to practice? Read this one
line and judge. "Parliament
says to Statute

given to them. A quantity of this matter necessarily provided for
my own use will be at my learned Master's service. In a
point of view stra practical - this is as a matter of small
importance? Of miscollocation Behold thus an example, and then judge
. | "Parliaments
(2)
Statute shall be held once in every 1 year or oftener if need be." Miscolocation, that: Proper collocation
this. Parliaments shall be held once in every year,
and if need be, oftener.. Remedial into Intended you the timetable an un

(4)

[+] in that one of two principal claims to which alone in which alone it is designed to be applied; embedded embody it
in that one instead of being put putting it at the end of on the two. In one of which
it wasis not intended to be applied.


(3)|

Not that by this thus can
be any adequate assurances that by this or any other form of words
the dispute in whose form this was held up afterward held up
the dispute would have held himself bound. But if he had been,
think of the effect that might have been produced on the destiny
of England, and through England of the habitable globe. For
general application, take this rule. Imbed your limitation clause [+]


IV Rules for the avoidance of lengthiness in of which
as above. Of these likewise there will be be an assortment at my
learned masters service. Of the application made of them one
example has been already given: If tolerably well contrived,
they will not be altogether devoid of interest to any one by whom
any such desire is entertained of seeing it rendered possible
for men to be been in mind acquainted with the right the obligation for the
new fulfilment of which they will be punished, in the right of
In which by the non-acquaintance they will lose the benefit. Made
Course be taken for the framing of their rules, looking now in
number of the English Acts of Parliament in small number will
suffice and making observable of the several forms which in rich repository
repository lengthiness and
susplage may be
seen assuming



Identifier: | JB/078/060/001
"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 78.

Date_1

1826-12-08

Marginal Summary Numbering

Box

078

Main Headings

Review of Humphreys

Folio number

060

Info in main headings field

Review of Humphreys

Image

001

Titles

Category

Text sheet

Number of Pages

1

Recto/Verso

recto

Page Numbering

C3 / E3

Penner

Watermarks

J WHATMAN TURKEY MILL 1824

Marginals

Paper Producer

Jonathan Blenman

Corrections

Paper Produced in Year

1824

Notes public

ID Number

25151

Box Contents

UCL Home » Transcribe Bentham » Transcription Desk