¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Principals
1. principal [n] - See also: principal
Lexicographical Neighbors of Principals
Literary usage of Principals
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Handbook of Criminal Law by William Lawrence Clark, William Ephraim Mikell (1915)
"principals AND ACCESSARIES 44. Parties concerned in the commission of felonies
are principals or accessaries according as they are present or ..."
2. Handbook of Criminal Law by William Lawrence Clark, William Ephraim Mikell (1915)
"principals AND ACCESSARIES 44. Parties concerned in the commission of felonies
are principals or accessaries according as they are present or absent when ..."
3. Handbook of criminal law by William Lawrence Clark, William Ephraim Mikell (1915)
"principals AND ACCESSARIES 44. Parties concerned in the commission of felonies
are principals or accessaries according as they are present or absent when ..."
4. A General Abridgment and Digest of American Law: With Occasional Notes and by Nathan Dane (1824)
"Who are principals,—who accessaries. In considering crimes and punishments, it
is often a question, who are principals, and who accessaries, ..."
5. Outlines of the Law of Agency by Floyd Russell Mechem (1903)
"Insane persons as principals. 41. Infants as principals. 42. Married women as
principals. 2. Who May Be the Agent. 43. Less competence required in agent ..."
6. A Treatise on Crimes and Misdemeanors by William Oldnall Russell, Charles Sprengel Greaves (1843)
"principals in the first degree. cipals in the second degree. How far a principal
in CHAPTER THE SECOND. OF principals AND ACCESSORIES. L principals in the ..."
7. Commentaries on the Laws of England: In Four Books by William Blackstone, Thomas McIntyre Cooley (1884)
"So, the seconds at a duel, if death ensue aie held as principals for murder. Reg.
v. Young, 8 C. &P., C44. In some states the distinction between я ..."
8. Lawyers' Reports Annotated by Lawyers Co-operative Publishing Company (1904)
"One branch seems to be an obligation for the payment of a debt already existing
and due by the principals to the guarantees, the plaintiffs, and the other ..."