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Definition of Offerer
1. Noun. Someone who presents something to another for acceptance or rejection.
Definition of Offerer
1. n. One who offers; esp., one who offers something to God in worship.
Definition of Offerer
1. Noun. One who offers. ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Offerer
1. one that offers [n -S] - See also: offers
Lexicographical Neighbors of Offerer
Literary usage of Offerer
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. A Treatise on the Law of Sale by Mungo Ponton Brown (1821)
"In the event of the highest offerer failing to find caution, the question occurs,
whether the immediately preceding of- ferer is entitled, (in a question ..."
2. A Treatise on the Conveyance of Land to a Purchaser, and on the Manner of by Robert Bell, William Bell (1830)
"It is usual to bind the highest offerer to find caution for his offer, within a
certain number of days, under the penalty of forfeiting the purchase, ..."
3. The Essentials of Business Law by Francis Marion Burdick (1902)
"Death of the offerer.—An offer can not be turned into a contract by its acceptance
... It is often said that the death of the offerer operates as an implied ..."
4. The Principles of the American Law of Contracts at Law and in Equity by John Davison Lawson (1905)
"offerer may Prescribe Time, Place and Conditions of Acceptance. The offerer has
the right to prescribe the time,1 place,2 form or other condition of ..."
5. The Scottish Jurist: Containing Reports of Cases Decided in the House of by House of Lords, Great Britain Parliament. House of Lords, Parliament, Great Britain (1855)
"Higgins—or absolutely completes the contract. It is enough that the offerer has
said, or is held to have said, that if the offer be accepted d'Mto ..."
6. The Practice of the Court of Session: On the Basis of the Late Mr. Darling's by Charles Farquhar Shand, James Johnston Darling (1848)
"In that case, the first offerer having failed, application was made to have it
found that the sale had devolved on the second offerer; but no notification ..."
7. The Law of Quasi Contracts by Frederic Campbell Woodward (1913)
"Same : (3) Because of mistake as to identity of offerer. — A transaction which
is intended by both parties to effect the formation of a contract may fail of ..."
8. Principles of the English Law of Contract and of Agency in Its Relation to by William Reynell Anson, Ernest Wilson Huffcut (1899)
"... case shows that an acceptance is not communi- LE 4 EQ cated unless made as
indicated by the offerer. Hebb applied to the agent of a company for shares; ..."