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Definition of Offeror
1. Noun. Someone who presents something to another for acceptance or rejection.
Definition of Offeror
1. Noun. One who makes an offer to another. ¹
2. Noun. Someone who presents something to another for acceptance or rejection. ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Offeror
1. offerer [n -S] - See also: offerer
Lexicographical Neighbors of Offeror
Literary usage of Offeror
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Law of Contracts by William Herbert Page (1919)
"The act of the offeror in treating the offer as in force may prevent it from
lapsing.1 Such conduct is said to amount to an agreement to- give more time or ..."
2. American Business Law: With Legal Forms by John James Sullivan (1920)
"If the offeror names a time during which he will keep his offer open, this is
o:ie of the terms of the offer, and acceptance must be made within the time ..."
3. Women Business Owners: Selling to the Federal Government (1993)
"Proposals may be withdrawn in person by an offeror or his authorized ... (a) The
contract will be awarded to that responsible offeror whose offer conforming ..."
4. The Law of Contracts by Samuel Williston, Clarence Martin Lewis (1920)
"The offeror may impose as a condition of his offer that the acceptance be ...
It necessarily follows from the power of the offeror to dictate the conditions ..."
5. Principles of the English Law of Contract and of Agency in Its Relation to by William Reynell Anson (1906)
"b ' (c) Reason for rule that risk may be on offeror. These last words are one
way of stating the reason for throwing on the offeror rather than the acceptor ..."
6. The Law of Contracts by Clarence Degrand Ashley (1911)
"(a) Unless otherwise terminated, an offer remains in force, (1) During such time
as the offeror may designate, or, (2) // TIG time is designated, ..."
7. Principles of the Law of Contract: With a Chapter on the Law of Agency by William Reynell Anson, Arthur Linton Corbin (1919)
"In the case of acceptance we have seen that it is communicated, and the contract
made, if the offeree does by way of acceptance that which the offeror has ..."
8. Contracts: Extracts, Citations, Condensed Cases, Cases and Statements by Clarence Degrand Ashley (1899)
"It may also happen that at the time the contract arises, the offeror has changed
his mind and perhaps manifested such change of intention, ..."