¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Enures
1. enure [v] - See also: enure
Lexicographical Neighbors of Enures
Literary usage of Enures
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. A Treatise on the Law of Bills of Exchange, Promissory Notes, Bank-notes and by John Barnard Byles, Maurice Barnard Byles, Walter John Barnard Byles (1899)
"In whose favour notice enures. and who was not, therefore, obliged to take back the
... Notice by the holder enures in favour of all subsequent holders, ..."
2. A Digest of the Laws of England by John Comyns, Anthony Hammond (1822)
"So, a release to him in reversion and remainder enures to the benefit of ...
And to a reversioner after an estate-tail, enures to the tenant in tail, Co. ..."
3. Institutes of Common and Statute Law by John Barbee Minor (1877)
"We are to observe, (1), The appropriate words for a confirmation; (2), The several
modes whereby it enures or operates to make sure a ..."
4. Systematic Arrangement of Lord Coke's First Institute of the Laws of England by John Henry Thomas, Sir Thomas Littleton, Francis Hargrave, Heneage Finch Nottingham, Edward Coke, Matthew Hale (1836)
"On release by one of three joint tenants to one of his companions, it enures de
mitter Testate, ib.; but a release by one of two joint-tenants to the other, ..."
5. Elements of International Law and Laws of War by Henry Wager Halleck (1874)
"To whose benefit it enures. The right to all captures vests, primarily, in the
sovereign. When the capture enures to the benefit of individuals, ..."
6. A Treatise on the Law of Bills of Exchange, Promissory-notes, Bank-notes by Robert Thomson, John Dove Wilson (1865)
"... of notice to parties enures. any prior party, whether it proceeds from his
indorser, or from some earlier indorser to whom the latter has given notice. ..."