verba q
51verba debent intelligi ut aliquid operentur — /varba debant intelajay at aelakwad oparentar/ Words ought to be understood so as to have some operation …
52verba dicta de persona intelligi debent de conditione personas — /varba dikta diy parsowna intebjay debant diy kandishiyowniy parsowniy/ Words spoken of a person are to be understood of the condition of the person …
53verba fortius accipiuntur contra proferentem — /varba forsh(iy)as aksipiyantar kontra profarentam/ Words are to be taken most strongly against him who uses them …
54verba generalia generaliter sunt intelligenda — /varba jenareyl(i)ya jenareylatar sant intelajenda/ General words are to be generally understood …
55verba generalia restringuntur ad habilitatem rei vel aptitudinem personae — /varba jenareyl(i)ya restriggantar id habilateytam riyay vel aeptat(y)uwdanam parsowniy/ General words must be narrowed either to the nature of the subject matter or to the aptitude of the person …
56verba illata (relata) inesse videntur — /varba aleyta inesiy vadentar/°raleyta% Words referred to are to be considered as if incorporated …
57verba in differenti materia per prius, non per posterius, intelligenda sunt — /varba in difarentay matiriya par prayas, non par postiriyas, intelajenda sant/ Words on a different subject are to be understood by what precedes, not by what comes after. A maxim of the civil law …
58verba intelligenda sunt in casu possibili — /varba intelajenda sant in keys(y)uw posibalay/ Words are to be understood in [or of, or in reference to ] a possible case. A maxim of the civil law …
59verba intentioni, non e contra, debent inservire — /varba intenshiyownay, non iy kontra, debant insarvayriy/ 8 Coke, 94. Words ought to be made subservient to the intent, not the intent to the words. Bailey v. Abington, 201 Ark. 1072, 148 S.W.2d 176, 179 …
60verba ita sunt intelligenda, ut res magis valeat quam pereat — /varba ayta sant intelajenda, at riyz meyjas vaeliyat kwaem pehriyat/ The words [of an instrument] are to be so understood, that the subject matter may rather be of force than perish [rather be preserved than destroyed; or, in other words, that… …