Lexicographical Neighbors of Notour
Literary usage of Notour
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Scots Digest of Scots Appeals in the House of Lords from 1707 and of the by Robert Candlish Henderson, Great Britain Parliament. House of Lords (1908)
"A debtor may be rendered notour bankrupt by being apprehended and taken ...
After notour bankruptcy has been constituted by imprisonment on a decree for a ..."
2. The Law of Bankruptcy, Insolvency, and Mercantile Sequestration, in Scotland by John Hill Burton (1845)
"The term bankrupt is, in popular language, and frequently in legal discussion,
applied not only to persons in a state of notour bankruptcy, but to those who ..."
3. A Collection and Abridgement of Celebrated Criminal Trials in Scotland: From by Hugo Arnot (1812)
"John Guthrie for notour, ie notorious Adultery. ... Notorious, or notour adultery,
is, Imo, When children are procreated between adulterers; ..."
4. A Handbook of Bankers' Law by Henry Robertson, W. D. Thorburn (1881)
"L notour Bankruptcy. IT his always been the aim of the Courts of Law to prevent
fraudulent alienations of their property by insolvent debtors to conjunct ..."
5. The Scots Digest of the Cases Decided in the Supreme Courts of Scotland: And by John Condie Stewart Sandeman, Scotland Courts (1905)
"A creditor presented in the Sheriff Court a petition for the sequestration of a
deceased debtor who had not been made notour bankrupt. ..."
6. The Register of the Privy Council of Scotland by Scotland Privy Council (1905)
"time of the fishing, and in respect of thair notour legall behaviour and before
the * that there wes no complaint made upon thame. ..."
7. The Scots Revised Reports: Morison's Dictionary, 1 to 9424 (1908)
"... wore not called for their interest, although it was notour he had none. Fol.
Lie. v. 1, p. 132. Maitland, MS. No. 9. [2180] E. KINGHORN v. COLLAGE. ..."