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Definition of Inadmissibility
1. Noun. Unacceptability as a consequence of not being admissible.
Specialized synonyms: Impermissibility
Antonyms: Admissibility
Derivative terms: Inadmissible
Definition of Inadmissibility
1. n. The state or quality of being inadmissible, or not to be received.
Definition of Inadmissibility
1. Noun. The state of being inadmissible ¹
2. Noun. Something inadmissible ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Inadmissibility
1. [n -TIES]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Inadmissibility
Literary usage of Inadmissibility
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Law of Expert Testimony by Henry Wade Rogers (1891)
"The inadmissibility in Evidence of Opinions and Statements Contained in ...
Their inadmissibility in Evidence is the General Rule in the United States. 167. ..."
2. Justice in the Balance: Recommendations for an Independent and Effective by Human Rights Watch, Human Rights Watch (Organization) (1998)
"The Court must be able to regain custody in the event of a subsequent determination
that the conditions for inadmissibility no longer exist. ..."
3. History of the Hartford Convention: With a Review of the Policy of the by Theodore Dwight (1833)
"... but I am instructed to state to you the inadmissibility, on the part of the
United States, of such a consular superintendence as that which is ..."
4. The Law of Railways: Embracing Corporations, Eminent Domain, Contracts by Isaac Fletcher Redfield (1867)
"Illustrations of the entire inadmissibility of this mode of taxation. 5. And it
is no excuse, that, in consequence of the non-residence of the owners, ..."
5. A Treatise on the Law of Contracts by Charles Greenstreet Addison (1881)
"inadmissibility of oral evidence to add to, alter, or contradict, a written
contract.—Most systems of jurisprudence have manifested a decided preference for ..."
6. A History of the Late Province of Lower Canada: Parliamentary and Political by Robert Christie (1866)
"I have thus far deemed it my duty to explain the injustice and inadmissibility
of the objects for which your leaders contend, and for the attainment of ..."
7. The Likelihood Principle by James O. Berger, Robert L. Wolpert (1988)
"4.2.5 Stopping Rules and inadmissibility In Section 3.7 it was argued that behavior
in violation of the LP, but consistent with the WCP, ..."