facié
11Prima facie — (  /ˈpraɪ …
12prima facie — pri·ma fa·cie 1 / prī mə fā shə, sē, shē/ adv [Latin]: at first view: on first appearance absent other information or evidence guidelines which would prima facie accredit new entrance examinations as nondiscriminatory S. L. Lynch compare ex facie …
13prima facie case — see case 1c Merriam Webster’s Dictionary of Law. Merriam Webster. 1996. prima facie case n …
14prima facie — /prayma feyshiy(iy)/ At first sight; on the first appearance; on the face of it; so far as can be judged from the first disclosure; presumably; a fact presumed to be true unless disproved by some evidence to the contrary. State ex rel. Herbert v …
15ex facie — /ˌeks fā shē ˌē, fä kē e/ adv [New Latin, literally, from the appearance]: on its face valid ex facie compare prima facie Merriam Webster’s Dictionary of Law. Merriam Webster. 1996 …
16prima facie — pri‧ma fa‧cie [ˌpraɪmə ˈfeɪʆi ǁ ʆə] adjective [only before a noun] LAW based on facts that appear to be true, although they may later be proved not to be: • prima facie evidence of fraud * * * prima facie UK US adjective [before noun] ► LAW based …
17prima facie evidence — see evidence Merriam Webster’s Dictionary of Law. Merriam Webster. 1996. prima facie evidence …
18prima facie — (PREE mah FAY shee) [Latin] At first sight; as it first appears. In law, a prima facie case is one that appears, at first view, to be valid; prima facie evidence is evidence that would establish the fact alleged unless rebutted. although… …
19prima facie — meaning ‘based on a first impression’ (as in prima facie evidence), is usually pronounced priy mǝ fay shi in BrE, although there are several alternative forms in AmE. It does not need a hyphen even when used attributively (before a noun), as in… …
20Prima facie — Pri ma fa ci*e [L., from abl. of primus first + abl. of facies appearance.] At first view; on the first appearance. [1913 Webster] {Prima facie evidence} (of a fact) (Law), evidence which is sufficient to establish the fact unless rebutted.… …