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Definition of Perpetual warrant
1. Noun. A warrant with no expiration date.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Perpetual Warrant
Literary usage of Perpetual warrant
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. A Complete Collection of State Trials and Proceedings for High Treason and ...by Thomas Bayly Howell by Thomas Bayly Howell (1816)
"Bat, say they, there is a clause in the patent, which empowers the treasurer, Sec.
to make payments, &c. and this they call a perpetual warrant. ..."
2. England, the United States, and the Southern Confederacy by Fitzwilliam Sargent (1863)
"... by gross perversion and distortion of its principles and provisions, that it
has been made a perpetual warrant for slavery as well as an Ark of Liberty. ..."
3. Philosophy of Knowledge: An Inquiry Into the Nature, Limits, and Validity of by George Trumbull Ladd (1897)
"... form contains within itself the perpetual warrant for the truth seized upon
and expressed by both these theories. But both Idealism and Realism, ..."
4. Philosophy of Knowledge: An Inquiry Into the Nature, Limits, and Validity of by George Trumbull Ladd (1897)
"... form contains within itself the perpetual warrant for the truth seized upon
and expressed by both these theories. But both Idealism and Realism, ..."
5. The Ideal Ministry by Herrick Johnson (1908)
"Here is the perpetual warrant for God's great ordinance of gospel proclamation.
3. To be like Christ, to stand in His stead and speak in His behalf, ..."