¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Exceptions
1. exception [n] - See also: exception
Lexicographical Neighbors of Exceptions
Literary usage of Exceptions
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. United States Supreme Court Reports by Lawyers Co-operative Publishing Company, United States Supreme Court (1912)
"Reference is made in the bill of exceptions to tue note and the testimony in
support of it, rather as evidence of the amount due to the plaintiff than as ..."
2. South Eastern Reporter by West Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals, West Publishing Company, South Carolina Supreme Court (1920)
"It is essential to the validity of a bill of exceptions that it shall show on its
... A defective bill of exceptions cannot be aided by extrinsic evidence, ..."
3. Supreme Court Reporter by Robert Desty, United States Supreme Court, West Publishing Company (1913)
"This brings us to the motion to dismiss; and its determination depends on the
facts concerning the alleged bill of exceptions, and whether there has been ..."
4. Reports of Cases Argued and Determined in the High Court of Chancery: During by Great Britain Court of Chancery, Frederick James Hall, Philip Twells, Charles Christopher Pepys Cottenham (1851)
"And if the Plaintiff does not set down such exceptions within such four days,
... Exceptions for XIV. The Plaintiff having filed exceptions for insuffi- wn ..."
5. A Treatise on the Law of Torts in Obligations Arising from Civil Wrongs in by Frederick Pollock, James Avery Webb (1894)
"General and particular exceptions. Some of the principles by which liability is
excluded are ... Exceptions like those of consent and inevitable accident, ..."
6. The Modern Law of Partnership: Including a Full Consideration of Joint by Scott Rowley (1916)
"Keeping this in mind, some American cases are cited, which touch upon these
apparent exceptions. § 75. Exceptions—Sharing of profits as compensation for ..."
7. The Republic of Plato by Plato (1888)
"(few exceptions, such as geometry and its accompanying sciences, which, according
to us, in some small degree apprehend what is real,—we find that, ..."