¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Jettisoned
1. jettison [v] - See also: jettison
Lexicographical Neighbors of Jettisoned
Literary usage of Jettisoned
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Law of General Average: English and Foreign by Richard Lowndes, Edward Louis De Hart, George Rupert Rudolf, William Robertson Coe (1912)
"If the goods jettisoned had previously been damaged, Rule when or if, ... This was
an action is usually charged on jettisoned goods against the shipowner ..."
2. Treatises on Average, and Adjustments of Losses in Marine Insurance by Willard Phillips, William Benecke (1833)
"Other goods shipped instead of those jettisoned. Freight pro Tata, contributes.
consequence be consumed by the wages, there is no freight to contribute, ..."
3. The Law Summary: A Collection of Legal Tracts on Subjects of General by Benjamin Lynde Oliver (1833)
"Of settling the value of the property jettisoned. In order to determine the
amount, which each contributory interest should pay towards the general average, ..."
4. The Judicial Dictionary, of Words and Phrases Judicially Interpreted, to by Frederick Stroud (1903)
"jettisoned goods may become Jetsam, but only so when found. ... 11) nor goods
jettisoned in consequence of the ship putting to sea without sufficient ..."
5. Transactions of the National Association for the Promotion of Social Science by George Woodyatt Hastings, Andrew Edgar, Charles Wager Ryalls, Edwin Pears (1862)
"governed by this simple rule—Nothing has any contributing г»!л unless the owner
of it receives something for it ; and the owl*" г goods jettisoned does not ..."
6. Rose's Notes on the United States Supreme Court Reports (2 Dallas to 241 by Walter Malins Rose, Charles Lawrence Thompson, United States Supreme Court (1917)
"140, holding, where goods jettisoned were already damaged by firo so as to be
worthless, remainder of cargo is not liable to average; Emery v. ..."
7. The American Slave-trade: An Account of Its Origin, Growth and Suppression by John Randolph Spears (1900)
"... Ship's Rolling on the Manacled Cargo—Living Slaves jettisoned to Make a Claim
on the Underwriters—Horrors of " The Blood-Stained Gloria "— Blinded Crews ..."
8. General Average by John H. Gourlie (1879)
"Freight of Cargo jettisoned, or Otherwise ... Freight is allowed the vessel for
merchandise jettisoned and ..."