¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Interlocutors
1. interlocutor [n] - See also: interlocutor
Lexicographical Neighbors of Interlocutors
Literary usage of Interlocutors
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Scots Digest of the Cases Decided in the Supreme Courts of Scotland: And by John Condie Stewart Sandeman, Scotland Courts (1905)
"Appeal — interlocutors subject to Review—Sheriff Court Act, 1853, sec. 24.— An
appeal was taken against a Sheriff Court interlocutor giving interim decree ..."
2. The Law Reports by John Fraser Macqueen, Great Britain Parliament. House of Lords (1869)
"Therefore I approve entirely of the motion, proposed by my learned friend to be
submitted to your Lordships, that the last interlocutors should be affirmed ..."
3. The Scottish Jurist: Containing Reports of Cases Decided in the House of by Great Britain Parliament. House of Lords, House of Lords, Parliament, Great Britain (1832)
"The appeal was against the whole interlocutors ; and the words of the judgment
of the House of Lords, finding the pursuer not liable in expenses to the ..."
4. Spenser's Shepherd's Calendar in Relation to Contemporary Affairs by James Jackson Higginson (1912)
"THE interlocutors OF THE ECCLESIASTICAL ECLOGUES One of the interlocutors of the
May eclogue is Palinode. This name is of classical origin, ..."
5. The Practice of the Sheriff Courts of Scotland in Civil Causes by John Dove Wilson (1875)
"List of Appealable interlocutors.—To the appealable interlocutors above ...
The result is to present the following table of appealable interlocutors. ..."
6. The Revised Reports by Robert Campbell, Frederick Pollock, Oliver Augustus Saunders, Arthur Beresford Cane, Joseph Gerald Pease, William Bowstead, Great Britain Courts (1894)
"And it is further ordered that the said Court of Session do, after such review
of the interlocutors in the process of suspension, proceed as to them *shall ..."
7. The Practice of the Court of Session: On the Basis of the Late Mr. Darling's by Charles Farquhar Shand, James Johnston Darling (1848)
"... has been given effect to, since the passing of the Judicature Act in 1825,
although the latter statute limits the period of review of interlocutors to ..."