Common Law Dictionary

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Summary

The 'CROWN' is a Creation of man, and a reflection of


man, Just as man is made in the image of gOD,

Common law (LAWFUL) 'CROWN' (LEGAL)

Man

i= ~

Man PERSON

Authority and Rights Duties and Obligations

[gOD'S]law Statutes [man made! law

Complalnl

Wish Ask

Request

Verify Witness {Statement]

--
Order Must

Mirror images (inverted)

Introduction

I his IS a mini 'Common law' dictionary, few people


I eahsethere arc two main Societies present in a

rommon Law Land (also commonly known as 'the


Commonwealth' or 'British tmplre"

1- a LEGAL©;law Society or 'CROWN'


(Fictional/two dimensional). and

2· LAWFUL;Common law Society (three


dimensional world)

It i~only when we fall foul Of legal Statutes [not to be


confused with "Law"] that we suddenly awaken to
something's not Right In our Courts or our teachIt gs.

Oflen it's the reausarton. that If You thought You were a


Lawabiding Citizen how did I lose in Court? Once You
read this book You begin to seethe solutions and should
be a lot more careful With Your language in a Court,

[Page 1 of 42]
This book gives a quick summary of the key words,
it's advisable If You are going to Court:
1) make a Claim at 'Queen's Bench' or 'Court of
Record' (not the same as a Counter-claim), for a
useful guide purchase 'Un/(ommon/ow moking 0
own Clairn mini book' from disporchuk.com,
2) practice using these meanings In Your day to day
language, so that at any Court appearance Its
one less thmg to think about,
3) learn the Court rules before You play, listen to
some old UnKommonlaw radio shows (Google
'talkshoe radio uncommonlaw'),

If Your not going to Court (yet) It's easier to resolve the


matter Privately In writing to avoid airing Your laundry
In it Public venue,

1. Firstly Its best to learn old Common law Enghsh


writing skills, a useful gUide You could purchase
a book like' Un/(ommon/ow Letter Writing mini
book' (available at dlspatchuk.com),

2. Listen to Karl Lentz's UnKommonlaw talks to


learn the logic and rules for Your subject area,
al 'Google' and visit 'Talkshoe radio
uncommonlaw' and listen to old radio shows
b) You can purchase OVO'sfrom
dtspatchuk.com

[Page 2 of 42]
c) Visit Youtube channel 'TruslinAlilaw'
d) It's the words we ,,5f·th,,1 usually trips man-
kind up, "Shibboleth" is a word with two
different meanings,

',0 without knowing this, if a man appears In an


Administrative Court and uses common Englishwords
he!hasno Idea the confusion and pam he Is about to
<.,Jusehimself, as the LegoldictlonolY word often has an
opposite l"1eanirl!: to a wmmon English dictiono')! word,

look out tor words that look similar but have 'E~pr(!5sJy'
dlffere,.,t meanings,

'PROPERT¥': owned by a Man or (woirr~n with


exclusive Property Rightsof usage and Enjoyment,

'REAL PROPERTY" legalese meaning nat Owned by


man and part of the CROWNunder the CROWN's
Jurisdiction and contralto be administered any which
way the CROWNsees fit,

[Page 3 of 42]
Key

Notice I wrote the word above, "LEGAl©",


1) It Is in all capitals meaning it's a fiction and not
the name of a man,
2) It has a Copyright symbol, as it is the "CROWN'''s
creation/language copyright, ttus book is not
"CROWN" copyright nor are the writers giving
any "legal" advice, as we go by King James
Version of the BIble and not any other Master,
fictional entity or gOO, all defmitrons are from a
man's prospective, including our guess on what
COntext these foreign legalese words are used In
our experience,

i wrote 'gOO' strangely because I believe his name


should never be written, I wnte like that so You can
read it, bull can still keep to my beliefs,

(v); means Verb version of a word (a doing word)


(n); means noun version of a word (a name)
(adj); means adjective version of a word (a describmg
word)

'CAPITALISATION' of words, usually help me Identify


Fictions, ghosts, companies, reduction in Rights,
basically not another man or (wolman to which I am
only obliged to answer too

1111',mini book is written in the mascullne tense similar


1'1law books; Man; (masculine)
(wo)man; (teminine)
man-kind; (pleural),

1'1(; Proto Irdo European language, first and earll'


collecnon of languages spoken by man,
()llgm<ltlflg around the Asian Indian and European land,

"II words are defined by i, a man: Bali Maan , and based


upon my beliefs at the nme or wntmg, they may change
Irem time to time dependant on what context the word
IS used,

[Page 4 of 42]
1\1 r user
A man (ACCUSER)claiming another 1I1~n
(WKONGDOER) done d Wrong,

FXAMPLE
Man has the Right to 'Question his Accuser'
Compare with (Habeas Corpu~ Act of 1679)
when You ~tilte this in Court and tne Accuser IS a
fiction 'CROWN' or 'REGINA', (it becomes
Impossible to appear In the Court), I usually
'require' another beanng date to dllow the
Prosecu:lOn "dequate time to rnuke
JrI angements to bring my Aecuser forth,

Address In)
Place of 'residence'
Address (v): "10 guide, set right, point direct"
usuallv to a place of business were bills are to be
sent,
see 'ltouse'

Affidavit (n)

1590's, frorn Medieval latin literal y meaning "he


has statf'o on oath"
usually the first word of 'Sworn Statements'

[Page 5 of 42]
Affirmation and Sworn
Affirmation
from old 14" Century French word,
"assertion that something is true"
tatln, solid assurance from past pdrllLlple stern
or afflrmcU!!
In L,)w, as the QU.ll<.eranernative to Oalh tJkillg
r rom 1690",
Sworn
To swpar on rhp Holy Bible (or otber book thp
[woJman believes In) 10 luke ,II' Oath or tell the
truth,
Linked to bad lanp,uaf,eand hence some 'or
rellgiou 5 reasons prefer to affirm as In the Bible
Matthew "his followers not to swear",

Afford
moved forward with "Afford a Court of Record"

Amused
as ir. "we (or tne Court) are not amused" : Stare
Stupidly

tall to an authority,
(at the same time declaring that Youare not a
Authority or in control)

Appear

lookup the word 'see' meaning to 'Understanrf

Call for an answer, make a requsst or seek


I",rmlsslon from a higher authorrty or parent,

[Page 6 of 42]
Assention; ascension (n)
"ascent of Christ into Heaven on the 40th day
after Resurrection" c 1300
"a ri~i,g"l
frOf)' latin
"to mount, ascend, go up"

Assumption and Presumption


To Presumesomething without lI;lhillty,
When the Prc$umptiol' (without liability)
converts to bearing liability it i~then turned into
an Asst,;rrpt'on,

At and In,
Notice the difference at thetop RIj~h!of Court
Claimsforms for example:
1) in 'Queen's Bench'
2) at 'Queen's Bench'

In: as In we can meet 'in' a tree, but then bourd


by the tree's rules (Jurisdiction)
At: as In we can meet at/near the tree. but not
neces~anly bound by the tree's rules

[Page 7 of 42]
Ball
from old french "Pail, small woodpn bucket,
bear a burden"
Example
Bearing a burden of a Charge in Court,
Translated as burdened with carrying a (Pall)
bucket full of water until the case IS over, If It wa~
against Your will. Youcan Bill the man who
burdened You,

Bear
In contract law context; to bear liability for,

Believe
Only a man can believe,
a man can believe whatever he likes be that
religiOUSor what he thought he saw,
no one can tell you what You can beheve,
for example:

i beiieve he did Wrong to I

or
he did Wrong (could be seen as a libellous
statement)

[Page 8 of 42]
Breach
tal(en f'orr PIE a f;gur.1t v(!ly • a brea« ng of
rules" (not law. 'IJlp~like Statutes). old lngllst-.
to "break or Irarrurc", Fhlt1KOOrill n also
"open.ng"

Breach of Enclosu re;


(ndose "Actinn cf enclosing", mid I!>'" century,
ano Enclosure. "1.,011wheh s enclosed" from
1550, hence a 'breach IaIten from 1'1C a
figuratively· a brl.·,lklng ot rules" (not law, rules
like Statutes)

Bribe (v)
late 14'" Ccntury
"pilfer, steal, also practitl! extornon"
From old Frcnch In "go bt!gglng"

See'Extortion'

[Page 9 of 42]
Case law
Case law can not usually be affirmed, as anyone
referring to them are reading someone's
tnterprerancn or summary, only by reading
around the whole subject can we understand, or
better still a man turn up to explain the logic on
how to apply this 'Statute' and In what situation
can it be used, exercise your Right [compare
with Habeas Corpus of 16/9J a body ITIl.Ist
appear, it's unlikely anyone in the court has First
hand knowledge of what was saId at the case to
which this law was written from,
will anyone speak in the court and 'Press the
Reeo'd' about the olel case law or statutes;
Llsually NO, (~he law makers are usually old and
dead)
"so what case law, so its just 'Your' or someone's
mterpretaticn: Hearsav? Is someone goirlS tu dill
that old dead Judge or Barrister up and get him
to swear and testify in open ccurt today?"

[Page 10 of 42]
Certify (v)
from 14'· century "to declare the truth of" also
"vouch and confirm" (an officral record etc.)

Chain of Command
a list of who Is the liable person(s) that looked
after a piece of evidence or paperwork. to
protect against tampering or forgery.

Citizen
from latin; a person of a society or family. a lit Ie
with dunes, obligations and allegiance to a
Country.

Claim
Claim (v): From 13'· Century to "call out" or "cry
out: to ask or demand by Right or authorit V"
Claim (n): .. a demand or Right: Right of
Claiming"
Making a statement or a Oaim about a
Wrongdoer about a Wrongful [inlactlon
The Word Claim is from a Common law origin.
(not a 'Counter claim' this is a legaleseword
diminishing the word 'claim')
a 'Claim' is more powerful than a ·COmplainr·...

[Page 11 of 42]
a claim IS based on Property and a Wrong,

Companies, Corporations, Government, Police and


Councils;
ExiSt to Secure and protect property of man

Command (n)
From 14" Century French, "order, command",
from 'Commander (v)' also Command in mid
15" century meaning "control, authority"

Complaint (codes/statutes)
ArE In reff;!ren(p to lp£llese 'Codes' or 'Statute"

For example
My WIfe comp/oms that I did not wash the
dishes,

so what did anyone die, was any law broken?"


NO

Old my WIfe carry on complaining that I did not


pull my weIght?
·YES and so what?"

[Page 12 of 42]
A complaint ISweak in comparison to a Claim,
If she said Hiwish to make a claim against You", I
lump to It! II

Comprehend
Senseof perceIVinghow something works, to
take together, to unite; Include; seize
Understanding (but not necessarily to
'Understond1

Common law
Customsand behefs found within a People, that
ISFair and Just to all constituents/Citizens at that point
In time and place,
Customs; Rules;Poliaes; Regulations; found within a
Society,

Conjecture In)
From late 14'·century French,"Interpretation of
signs and omens" .. "surmise, guess"
or directly from latin "conclusion, interpretation,
guess,inference:
"to throw together,"

Sense of "fonnl1g of opinion without proof" is


1530'5,

see 'speculation' and 'hearsay'

Conviction
is a belief. lhen yoI, con be Wrong and found
guilty,

[Page 13 of 42]
Dead
Senseless,
as In a fictional entity: PERSON

Deign (v]
13" Century French word mean InP.;
"deem worthy or fit",
and In Italian ard Spanish sources;
sense of "take or accept graciously"

Demand (v)
From 12'" Century from old trench "to rcqucsr:
to demand"
Late 14'" century Mask,make Inquiry"
A weak InqUiry as opposed to 'command'

Demand (n)
late 13'·cefltury "a question"

Demanding (adj)
Edrly 15" Century "asking. questtontng" Dr later
in 1Y'" Century ~insi5tent"

Discharged
A "Discharged COUft case" is rather like a Solder
being told he is "dlsilollourably Discharged" from the
armv, never allowed back,
Simila' to a Court case 'charge' never aliowE'd back,

Dismissed
A "Disrnissed Court case" is rdtller likp a sotoor
being told to dlsmlss, and is alloweu to return and serve
the next day,
Similar to a Court case 'dismissed' for now the 'charge>'
may return,

Default
As is a 'DefaUlt :udgement' as in the man acting
as a JUDGE passing Jucgeentdue to someone (like
CLAIMANT or DEFENDANT) being missing and lailure to
art at the COURT case

[Page 14 of 42]
Endorsed (v)
"Confirm and Approve"
originally bv slgning or "writing on the b,;ck"
corn pa re with' Notary'
E~okc
"callout, call forth, rouse, summons"
Sense of "calling sp"lts"
Move from one tribunal to another;
Compa re with 'invoke'

Extort (v)
Communicating a threat (Terrorism),
Bribery, practising extortion,
extorted: practislng extortion,
In terms of contract Law. VOII can not be forced
under Duress or extortion In to a contract,

Expert (nJ
From ('arly 15'- century "person wise through
experience",

Expressly
'Expressed' specifically in writtng and nor
'implied',
Just as all Law and contracts ~I-ould he,
Exparte
A communication or Notice (UI England n N~44
'Application Court form') to lJe I'eard without
the other party to a case,
This is usually rarely granted a:. ill:' unfair hy it's
very nature to the none preseru p~rty,
usually the party that I\pplles Jnd i~ present at
the heanng IS liable and have some sort of
undertaking IokeLiability insu(<Illce in Ci"p al any
possible Error and subsequent Harm creatl'd by
the Action to cover the Court Ruling if granted,
Extortion
"wrench out, to obtain by terce"
See 'bribe'

[Page 15 of 42]
Fealtv
Pleage of allegiance or Service, from one
peRSON to another PE~50N,
common In Feudal times frorr a subordirate to his lore
after paying Homage the oath was usually sworn on a
Bible to be ~althful to his Lord, t~e lord In return

granted a Hef [Fee) or some manner of support

Fraud
"Crlrnrnal decepi on"
but burden 0: proo! is on the 'Accvser' to prove
the defend a'11really belreveo he knew he did
'Wrong',

Forthwith
From middle Englash.I\long With, at the same
lime.
Modern Illearlifl!;: irnmedrdtely, IMtl'out delay

Government
Government was tre.;~cd by man-kind to serve
and protect Property of man,
Inell-ding ar-d not limited:o Federal. local
(P~rishl Church) Councils, all Courts and other
parts of Government

Guarantee ~n)
Carly15"" century uv.drrant rhar tbe title to a
Property is true",
·'PEH:'ONgilling scTlPthing as securuv"
a sen~E'fir" "pledge" itself

Guest
GUESt,enemy, stranger,
If a Judgecalls You a uue~t. this is u<uilily a last
warning before the Judgepub You in Contempt
of Court (Jail time),

[Page 16 of 42]
Harm
"hurt, e"il, wie' pain, nsutr", _10'iSof olood,
Harm (v) N to rurt"
compote with.' 'Hn'm', 'Injury' nnd 'Lo~<'
SC!c Wrong'

Hear
Arelo and West ~axon origin
.. to 1e;1', [0 obcv, lislen \10) Follow; au:!'d» '0,
t',fd'll: judge

Here
Old lnglbh uet "I" tlus place, where ope puts
himself",

Hcar~av In)
Froru e.:.rlyt;r Pl.d is" ceorerv, from the phr~;e
tu "111.'01 sov" 'veil out"
S~1lconjectur e d,d )p<:wlat,on,

IIome
From French 'Horrme" nun,
(xample
Oanks otter. wnte:
"YOJ' ,",orlt! ,ndy bp qp .ncss('sscd.f ¥OJ con't
keefJ ufJ witn "our P~Y"'f'nts"
Translated ..r~;Yuur 'mon' may be repossessed jl

YO,I don't PdY,


u'illaUy,t>e next man to ccme along With our
loa,lit- will rr ake hiS claim en ,t (like a landlord.
b.mk affinill, estate agent)

Homestead
"home, town, V llage"
"a lot of land adequate for rna nlaince of a
family"

House
A place or building to whrth Yo" can ser d
busmessletters or invoices loa,
Also seen and e~pres,pcl .h "Elizabetn Is from th~
House of W ndsor",

[Page 17 of 42]
Human
Origin Iron- legales!' meamng "monster"
II' and 'i}
When Yo\..use the 't' or 'j' word It's very
important the way you write it, It can denote
what YOUI status IS,
i-man with inherer.t Rigl"l,s
1=legal fiction under Jurisdiction of the CROWN
J nd oss ur man's Rights,

\Jotl ce the forrr ofthe letters,


'i' : looks like a nick man with his head on;

'I' ; looks like a hleroglyph for the wooden frame


werp man gets hilnp.ed'
~

olso see :<II '

Idiot
f)flVdll.' man not 'person' In a society
In I cgatcsc: unable to contract with

Fnr example
The man actirg as a Judge calls You an -IdIot';
Great, he means yo ...are 'unable to comract with
or fin e in an Admi" Court'

[Page 18 of 42]
or
I often say" i must be a-i idiot, I car-'t Ul'lderstar
what You are saying"
As In a can't understanc Legalese or be
contracted with, 1 have no comprehension of t~
customs and traditions,

Also see 'Uflderstand'

Ignoramus (n)
Mid l~-h century Anglo·~rench legal term
meantr g "we do not know" or "not too <10'-""
rrom the word Ignoranf al'd hence the phrase
"Ignorant Person"
Gland J"rv'~ ouen wrote UII tlte ba~k01a Sill
presented by il pdrty 1 Covrt, either "true bill"
UI "lgliolalT1J~"(Wt: du not know],

Implied
"Guess, dP~IOXllllciIIOI'"
OPPosite to Expressed; spec!rl~

[Page 19 of 42]
Injury
"harm, damage, loss; specific injury, wrongful
actio-i, injustice, insult" accruable fioancial Loss
to Rights,reputation or Properly, in which ca~p
YOu"'lay wish to serve an lteml!>t!d bill,

Compare 'horm:'JrrjJJry' ofl(I'.'u'o):


See 'wrollg'

intercourse
F''Onl c:ontr.lctu.IIIlI('i.m1ng "to have bus ness
arr~ng"'mpn\1 cll.'.,lings,
Comm.mtrarlon with, exchange comme-ce.
running between, lnterventtoo, relattons

Invoke
"call upon, implore, to call, voice"

see 'evoke'

[Page 20 of 42]
Joinder
"act of joining together" (usually in speCific legal
senses) 16" century,
nature of relationship or contract that JOinSthe
parties,

Judge
originally 'Jew, cast a Slone; Order"
of persons and to administrate Your trust and
You,

Examplp.
I could say;
• i am a man and only Wish to be Judged by my
fellow man but If You Wish to Judge I or to
administrate my property, place Your 'Order' and
Sign it with Your fuU name and wet-ink
signature",

Jurisdiction
To have "control over",
In court Jurisdiction Is usuaUy gIVen by
comprehending and responding back to a Judge

[Page 21 of 42]
For example ..•
Example
1. Judge says "stand in the Docl('
You rnove to stand in the dock,

2 Judge says ·what's Your name?"


You soy YOllrnome,

Jury
1. Jury Trial -looks at Facts only, (also known as
"Petit Jury" French meaning 'Small Jury' of
between 6 - 12 people,
2 Trial by Jury looks at Facts and Law.
Grand Jury; tradItIonally used on Common
Law preliminary hearings, Funcncns include
Accustlonary; to see If 'probable cause' IS
there to prosecute, and Investigatory
functions: Ordering documents and
reviewing, Summonsing Witnesses.
Between 7 - 23 people and still used In rhe
USA.

See Magna Carta izis. and Chapter 39 The


Right to be tried by his Peers,

[Page 22 of 42]
land/man/Queen
man derives from the land. Your mum eat food
off the land from which You came from,
A King/Queen IS man's representative (MPs are
elected Repr~entativesln Housesof Parliament)
For Example
No man can Own land. as this would bo like
Owmng another man, which would be Sl~verv,
which hasbeen Out-Lawed,
This does not take away what land Registry
'believes' but IS a guide and can be logically
challenged
law
opinion on a tact.
comes Into being when II I~'Promulgated'; made
Public

legal Statute (ridged) and lawful


LegaleseStatutes
Picture as a RidgedStatue made of words.
Their weaknessbeing once thE'Words meanings
are defined or logICallytaken apart tile Statute
breaks and can not applv.
ExampleA

[Page 23 of 42]
Easy to see on long worded Statutes like 'The
illegal fermentation by an Artificial Heat source
Act'
What's Your dl!finitlo~ of ar:iflciaI7, the Act
probably didn't define Artificial and Gasor Coal
Is not Artificial In mv eyes its Realand Natural
Example B
rather than 'Then act'
very small worded Act,
very exact definitions of the words at the end of
the wri tten Act

let alone and leave me alone


let alone
00 110tWish to contract with,
leave me alone
Leave1"1e alone but may ~UIIbe able tu contract
or apply statute too,

Live
"to be, to n'le, ro have lif!?; to experience, to
supply one's sel: with food"
Example
Nonce it did not say ~YourHouse"
i Jsually pomt at myself If someone asks"were
do YouI ve T",
.f i said a buildirg 'address' tnat would 1would be
dead if i left that building,

loss
frorr "lost or destruction"
Youmay Wish to serve an 1:11'1
for the loss,
also Competency [n] in 1590's "rivalry"
16'" century ·sJfioEncy to satisfy the wants of

See 'hortl'l' "flJ(Jry~ tWfongt

[Page 24 of 42]
Man and (wo)man
'man' 15 made In gOD's Image,
Man as In man-kind (pleural), (pleural is not
'men')
Man derives from land and 15one with land who
IS represented by the Queen/King
Man-made (or man-kinds ancestors] built the
court house and created Legalese,
You can not define Your Creator and hence man
is not m legalese dictionary's,
Thai's why In an Admin Court, Court ~taff want
Youto Act as a 'De/endCIIlC which legalese
dolmes and has JurisdICtion (:control) ove«.
or '1 Cour; to Appear In Person" an act as a man
with Rolesand ResponSibilitieswithin a Society
(their 'Law society' or for a trust commonly
known as 'CROWN'),

Mandative Reporter
A requIrement of a PERSON to report a crime
(theft of property) like a Polleeofficer, Judge
doctor,

[Page 25 of 42]
Men
not pleural for man,
believed to be of Jewish origin, a term used to
identify a fellow Jew as in the title 'JewIsh',

Merit [n]
"moral worth, that whic~ assures divine Pity, to
earn, deserve, acq.nre, gain"
Merit [v] : "to be entitled too"

Money
unit of exchange or value,

Motion and Notites to Courts


Motion [n), t3th Century frorn taun "e (!IUVlng,,,
mouon, an emotion, [rom Po.l~t"to move"
Motion (v) late 15" century, "to I eqvest,
petltion", Motions only In in Adminbl rJtlu.
courts at Queen's Bench (Courb of Rt'CCHd) man
makes NullLI:!~and Ordl'[5 on Iy

Notarv (n)
"shorthand writer, Clerk, Secretary" From 12'"
Century latin,
'PERSONautherized to Jl.ttest contracts" from
Notary (v): French 1S" century,
A~ i~'NOTARY PUBLIC' Idle 15'" centurv r that
h,,~ tht! Frenth Order the subject- adjective
Related words: NOlarize, NotJriJI
CarTIl,hlre w'th '£ndof~elf
Notice (v)
early 1 ~th E'ntury, "to rrulify",
Sense'of "to point out" is from 1620's
MeanlnF, "to tako notice of' rs attested from )757

ilion Assumpsit
not to take up, take 10 oneself,

Nice

[Page 26 of 42]
Occupier
As in a foreign Invading force "to lake possesston
of, h,:>IO,seize' a place, time. person or employ
From the occupy (n)
Occupy arouna :s"century a Common
euphemism meaning "to have sexual intercourse
wltl1·
Of
literal y "pa-t of"
originally from PIE "off, away",
dWoy trom, dWdY, down,

Off (adj)
A,w~y fro:» ur [",lhl'f
In 1861 "not \IIcrkinp,"
Off(v)
In 1930'smeaning 'to kill"
In 1640's "To defer'
In 1882 "to move off'

Officer
Early 14'" centurv "person who holds an office"
with dunes and responsibrluies,

[Page 27 of 42]
One
"5 "gular, umqve, one"
Smgular one; o~ I~',' (not m'l 'PERSO~I'and 'I')

Order(n)
Originally "flow of thrcdth III d loom" YJpavlng;'l
spell,
then "Arrarge , arrar.gt;olrlcl:l",
10 the 1:'" cpnl..ry "P<l~ltsUII,estate: rule,
rt!l:luld~iun;rplig ml~ (lrc1c:'f",
III lilt! 13" Cfnlllry hnrly of persons that live
under d ",IIISIOII" ril~rlpllne",

Order (v)
Give Order to. o· arraege in Order"
EXAMPLE
IIDye deinf. and arranging my bus.ness, I accept
all Verifiable Orders but oree I have complied, be
prepared fer a Verifiable true Bill,

see 'Invoice pods' or d'spacchulc.rom

OWn (v)
Fne I<h ('(1&,,,,"1'1 hN", In own"
Also In 1853 'ONn up' 'Make full confession"
Own (adll
From PIE, "to be master off, possess"
Old fngl'5h 'posst>s<;I'dby" or "to r.ave"

[Page 28 of 42]
Pay
"Offering, pledgE":
NOInece"drily pay dll LIebl off, to make regular
offerings of money (money; Unit of exchange)

Person
A man hiding behind a mask, sometimes In a
false IlluSion of protection by hiSOffice, a person
also holds a Hankwithin a society,
tXIIMPlt.
A ticnon with Dunes and Re~r()n<,ihiliIY 10 the
'CROWN'
perse
latin literally meaning "by Itsel'"

Petition
early 14th century "a supplication or prayer,
especially to a deitv.

Presumption
Presume [to takE' a guess) about something
without liability,
When the Presumpnon (without liability)
converts rc bparing liability It is then turned into
an Assumpt,on.

see 'Assumption'

Property Rights
the owner of Property has exclusive Rights of Use
and Enjoyment,

Property, Including Children, wife, car


for someone to hold YOJr property (if no crime)
it can oelv be contractual or forced,

plaintiff
Plaintiff must appear LJegaleseHabeas Corpus
Act of 16791 compare with and
Common law (see'Rights') Rights to Question
my Accuser,a body must appear,

[Page 29 of 42]
Plead (v)
mid-13c., "make a plea in cocrt," trom An,glo-
Fr8f1chpletha, Senseof "request, beg" first
recorded Idle 14L. RcI.lll.!d: Plt!odcd; pleading;
111(>oilifigly

'Press thf Record'


Testify and give evidence under oath or
affirmation in Court,

see 'Record'
'QUEEN'S BENCH'
I he onlv Common law court for J 'milo' lo
appear with rulj,!~that benefit man kind,
In British Errpire celer-ies usually knnwr as
'Courts of Recurd'
not to be confused with Administrative courts for
CROWN employees and "QUEEN'S BENCH
DIVISION"
wher a KING comes to the throne to represent
the people (man) 'QUEEN's BENCH' would
change to KING's BENCH'

~f'E' Un/(nmmnninw mini honk on 'Quc cn's Bench'

[Page 30 of 42]
Rebel
aga'nst a higher aut~onty or gOD.

Retord In)
From the 13,11Ct:I,lu,y "I(!~tim(lnvrnmmit-pri to
writing,"
Irom Old Frpr,rh rf'rorrl "m~mory. statement,
,...port,"
Irom tecorde« 'to rprord" .see 'recora' lv} from
141'" century Mt'dnln~ "written account Of some
event"
Phrase on the record Is from 1900; adverbial
phrase off the record "corfidenuahv'' Is attested
from 1906.
Other va"a~/ons like Rewrd player, Re::ordJor 0
sportmg OChieVEf'le/;t
Record Iv)
Frurn lht! 12'" century' to repeat, reiterate,
recite: rehearse, Sf'1 by heart," •
FromOld French iz" cprtllry recorder 'tell,
leldte. repeat, redte, report, make known".
directly from latin "remember, call to mind
th'nk ever, be nindful of" ,

[Page 31 of 42]
also meamng "set down In wrItIng"

Notice of 'Rescission'
a removal of your signature off documents (or
rernovat from a contract).
used as a la5t resort as restores condinons boltk
to proor to the agreement.

Recuse Iv)
In law to "reject or challenge la JudgeJuror) a~
disqualified to act"
T.Jkenfrom the from late 14'10 century "to reject
another's authonty as prejudiced"
13'" century latin "make an objection agiunst,
dedine. refu5e, reject, be rductant to"
Register
An act of Registering Is to gIVe iJwavOwnership
and Rightsof Usage and Enjoyment of said
Property to another recorded on a Registeror
Registry.
EXAMPLE:
Reglstenng a Car with the DrMr,g Vehicle
LicensingAgency IDVLA),YougoveOwnership of
Your Property to a sub diVISionof tha CROWN,

[Page 32 of 42]
and subjecting to there will and terms,

Rellgate
From 1590's "bind together, fasten"

Relltigate
In legalese sense to litigate the same case again
that one that has already been decided or
Judgement pa5t upon,

Rights
'man' has Inherent Rights and privileges actions
that. man kind are entitled to by birth Right.
anything that Infringes on these Rights of man Is
known as a 'Trespass'

list of Rights(not a complete list);


1) Right to Own Property
2) to go from pomt A to POintB (freedom 01
movement),
3) Right to Equality,
4) Right from Discromlnation,
5) Right to Ufe,lIberty and Security.
6) Freedom from Slavery,

[Page 33 of 42]
7) Right to Privacy,
8) Freedom from rornn e dOO :IFgrnrilne
treatment,
9) Right to be recognised d> ~ man,
10) Right to be considered Ilinocent hFfore
guilty,
H) Right to a f,ur rr,ai,
12) Right to Question my Accuser,
13) rreedom from Persecutton,
14) Right to marriage, Reproduw and Filmily,
15/ rreedor'l of beliel ana Reh~lofl,
16110 be let- alone, (treedom horll >ldtl? or
per$onal,nlprt",rpncp. ",II,,: rbove
Rights)

Fo, furthe, re~ulflb ~{,!ed~d guidP 'hI' 'Uruversot


Dec/oration oj {Humun IRlg"I~', (note HUMan:
means monster In Il!gdl~,e but thE"£' "R,ghIS"
have ancleru origlf'l5 before the 'Lellal me'Ny'
altered thern]

Resident
"one who resides, as a torelgner CJrtrainee"
See' occupier'

Restore & 'Restoration of Property'


Restore frol"'1 13~1century, 'te I:'\,C back," also,
"to build up again, repair; rebuild, renew, back
again"
from PI!: "to stand, set down, rnokc or be firm, n

with derivatives meaning "place til thing that is


standing"

Example
In Court a 'Judge' has thl? DUly <ondresponsibility
to 'Mandotive reporTing' n' Crimes and r-iust
protect and return 'Proaerty' to 'man',

Heree Karl Lentz's 'Unkomrnonlaw' phrase:


"1 req uh e lmmedi ate restoratlon of Property"
see 'U"KommonJaw- How to make a Gaim' ot
d;sPOlc.huk,wm

[Page 34 of 42]
Request [v]
from request (n) or 1530's French "ask egam,
req uest. reclaim"
Request!n)
From I ntln "" thinG askec for"
l1ul iJy Right and alJ.hority,

Requisition
An act of :ormally requiring .n Vlritirg or call
upon a man to perforM a certain action.
From Uti, century 1I.1!!dieolallatin"3 searcning"

[Page 35 of 42]
Sanction (v)
From around 1770's"confirm oy sanction, make
V,Jlidor binding" ano "to permit authoritatively"
from sanction In)
In old legaleseserse "to Impose a I)(mally on"

'secure In paper and effects'


Many good Engl,shm.." 'I"Vl! died If1 history to
preserve ami prarE'(' their Riel-tsto be 'secure if
tnetr pooers and effects' (also me:ming Hight to
Privacy)

See
literally "to Uncerstand"
See (v], Old EnglISh "to see, look, behold;
observe, perceive. understand experience, visit,
inspect"

Seer (n)
l-rom late 1·1" century "one to whom divine
revelations are made,"
agent noun from see (v)
from rhe bible SI!'15e "one that sees"

[Page 36 of 42]
Shall
future tense word, at some point in the Future
(the future never comes today, It remains in the
future)

Shibboleth
a word or custom whose variations in
I~
pronunciation or style can be used to
differentiate members of Ingroups from those of
out side of that sroup,
Hence this mini dictionary, the same words we
say day-tn and day-out but suddenly In a Court
context mean something completely different
than what Youordinarily mean,
Compare with 'synonym'

Signature
Sign; "pledge, bind"

Smart
"Painful, stinging.

Solicitor
as In solicrtrng "Prostitute. selling of one's body
or servrce"

[Page 37 of 42]
Speculation [n]
DisparaRlnR sense "mere coruecture'
See 'lnsarsoy' and 'coniecture'

State
"A State" i~a I'.roupof people (hat occupy" land
mass and ilglee oy consent to abide by a set of rules
that secure and protect property again'" rort'ign
"waders and peeple from with I,.,
Statement (n)
Commercially "document stating/displaying
debits and credit,

Steal
Act of Robbery
sec'Till:{t'

Sworn
Oath taking as '" sworn ~ldtl!me",
see 'Affirmation'

Synonym
Word ha~lng same sense as other,
U,;uallyplura! or singular versions of words
Corncare with '~hlhbo!erh'

Tool (v)
flrobably from toot (n) "to ma"age s<,lIfully"
EXAMPLE
"i -nay U'f' my 'son' as a 'Tool' to 60 my work"

Title
A ncnona I Narne bearing a burden or liability
wrth duties and respcnsimfities,
EKample
DEFHmAI\'T, PERSON,OWNER, QUEL'II, JUDGC,
OFFICER,FATHER,TENANT,l-EAVYW8GHT
CHAMPIAN OFTHEWORLD, YOU, ME, WE, HE.
SHE...

Tenant
a 'Perso r' that holes 'ana by Fitles 0, lease, and
has Common 1<1'"Te""I1LYRighI>to a
'LANDLORD' or 'OWNER,

[Page 38 of 42]
Trespass (n)
"A transgression"
Trespass (v)
"transgress ill seme active manner, commit an
aggressive ofense. to sin, in'nnge, enter
unlawfLllly,
usually upon Land, 01'1 a body (assault! batterv)
or upon a man's Rights,

Testify [v]
"serve as evtder-ce In a court"
From I~tl' 14'" century "give 1~8altestimony,
affirm the troth of, bear witness to"

Trespass (nl
From 13" century" i) transgression
Trespass (vI
13'· c..ntury "triln~grps,~ In ~ornpactive manoer,
ccmmlt an ilsgre~~ive Offf'II''', TO -Jn," Irom Old
Fr!!nch
Trespassory Taking
Is t!tfectlvely a thp1t, or taking ot ~ [tpm
(Inc.llldinl:! photos) without thl' owners

trial by Jury;
J~ry determine Facts and law,
the law is also on mal, does the LEw apply?,
Jury Nullification; II rre Jury lil1d~ d man not
gUilty ellen though they beneve he I~t;Ullty of the
charges,
Jury Trial; determines ;ust "ilers only,

True [truth]
faith, farthfulness, fidelity, loyalty; veracity,
qt.ality of be.ng true, pledge ccvenant

Theft (and Robbery)


Theft, to take wltho"t perr-ussron
Steal; Act ::>f Robbery
Robberv, "to Rub or Theil"

[Page 39 of 42]
Ultimo
a-ound 1610's Latin meantng "Last month"
later 'Ultlrnus" meaning 'last",
and 'Ultimate' meaning "last, final, farthest,
most distant, extreme"
and 'ultimatum' meaning "last chance/offer",
sarllest lise in 1580's used as "last day of "I1onthH

compare with 'Promixo' meaning "the nexr


month"

Understanding
lc!:"II!~c sense "10 stand under a rule, bpnp.rIrh i-l
hlghel aurhontv",

S~es, Ompl(!llImoJ',

Valid (ad!l
Froll' 16'" century French "habing force ir law,
legally b.nding",
In 1640's "suffiCiently supported by facts or
autrority, well-grounded",

Validate
"to ma ke valid",

Verify (1/)
early ill" centvrv frOI1" Old ~rench "substantiate,
find out the truth abovt'
from Medieval Latm "make true,'

Violation
put somethlrg 11'110 something,

sometimes used In a sense of buggery,


Example
In legol sense to Violate a Legal Statute,
I believe that translates "to take the 'l~GAL
::',ATUTE' from behrnc" whch makes no sense
(or a r-onsensej.

Vex
"attack, harrass, trouble, annoy"
Rel.;ted: vexed, vexmg, vexanovs (aojl

[Page 40 of 42]
Warrant (v)
"safeguard, protect; guarantee (as Hue), pleage"
from old rrench

Will
rllture tense word at some point in the Future
Ibut not today)
Uke the word 'Sholl'
Example
Seat belt Legal Statutes usually state:
"All 'DRIVERS' will put their seat belts on",
I believe that translates says "at some polnt III
the future i will put a seat heir on but it's noll he
futu re tocay'
[Note, seat belts are a good iaea generally I)

Wish (v)
Old English "to Wish, to srnvs after, cherish a
desire"
Only a man or (wolman can wish,
a (two dimensronal) Legal fiction/ PERSON can
nut wish,
Yuu ~clrI (Jraw d lia:)l~ 'md'" frum a OFFICERor
PEK!>ON(hindlng behind a mask) by requiring
saeisfJction to .:l uuestion:
"is n',ll YOIJi'""sh, i\ Ihat an Order?"

'iI'P 'UnKommonlavll'lVoke Pod' ot


dlspotrnuk.cam

Witness
Accept the title "wrmess" is to give sworn
testimo flY in Court,
Third party independent witness is the best type,

[Page 41 of 42]
Wrong
Wrong (n) "that which is improper or unjust,"
late Old Englls~, from 'wronq' (aol.). Meal1lng "an
unjust actio')" Is recorded frem 12"h century,
Wrong (v) to do wrong to," early 14 century,
from 'wrong' (adJ)

Related: Wrongdoer, Wronged; wrOllging

See 'harm~ ~injuryJor 'Joss:

You
a tlction aI title,
In a court st>nsp iI gpnprill forO' of address llsually
bearing liability i'accepted,

[Page 42 of 42]

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