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单词 prescriptible
释义

prescriptibleadj.

Brit. /prᵻˈskrɪptᵻbl/, U.S. /prəˈskrɪptəb(ə)l/
Forms: 1500s prescriptable, 1500s– prescriptible.
Origin: A borrowing from Latin. Etymons: Latin prescriptibilis, praescrīpt-.
Etymology: < post-classical Latin prescriptibilis liable or subject to prescription (1300, 1427, 1521 in British sources) < classical Latin praescrīpt-, past participial stem of praescrībere prescribe v. + -ibilis -ible suffix. Compare Middle French, French prescriptible liable or subject to prescription (1374 in legal use).With the form prescriptable compare -able suffix. Compare Middle French prescriptable that can be acquired by prescription (in an isolated undated attestation in legal use). With prescriptibility n. at Derivatives compare earlier imprescriptibility n. and the French word cited at that entry, and also French prescriptibilité (1876 in legal use; now rare).
Liable or subject to prescription; derived from or founded on prescription. In later use also: capable of being prescribed.
ΘΚΠ
society > law > administration of justice > court proceedings or procedure > action of courts in claims or grievances > [adjective] > liable to legal time limit
prescriptible1542
1542 King Henry VIII Declar. Causes Warre Scottis D iij b The hole prescription of the Scottis, if the matier were prescriptable, is thus deduced euidentely to .xiii. yere.
1570 J. Foxe Actes & Monumentes (rev. ed.) I. iv. 457/1 Also concurreth such continuance of time, that euen against Ius fisci, it is prescriptible.
1688 Answer Talon's Plea 31 A Sovereign Power, that neither suffers attaint, nor is prescriptible.
?1711 Case City Dublin in Relation to Election Lord Mayor 6 No usage since, if any such had been, would create a prescriptible or other Right to Restrain their Right or Freedom of Election.
1795 G. Wythe Decis. Cases Virginia 97 That the demand of the plaintiffs is in its nature prescriptible.
1800 in R. Phillimore Comm. upon Internat. Law (1857) III. x. i. 329/1 Their disinterested wishes to preserve the prescriptible rights of neutral nations.
1818 Times 23 July 3/5 The natural rights of man, neither prescriptible by time, destructible by the sword, nor extinguishable by tyranny.
1911 Yale Law Jrnl. 21 155 Prescriptible property, its continuous uninterrupted possession, and good faith.
1997 Los Angeles Times (Nexis) 25 July e3 Santa Clara County advertised for someone to grow legal marijuana prescriptible by doctors in California.

Derivatives

prescriptiˈbility n. the quality of being prescriptible.
ΘΚΠ
society > law > administration of justice > court proceedings or procedure > action of courts in claims or grievances > [noun] > a lawsuit > condition of being pending > limit of time for action to be raised > condition of being subject to
prescriptibility1766
1766 Ld. Kames Remarkable Decisions Court of Session 1730–52 7 Whatever argument, can be moved against the prescriptibility of such a right by an incorporation.
1968 Hist. Jrnl. 11 49 Late eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century discussions in Germany regarding the prescriptibility of fiefs.
1983 Philos. & Public Affairs 12 185 We have already seen Locke's views on the prescriptibility of natural rights.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2007; most recently modified version published online March 2022).
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adj.1542
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