Definition, Betydelse & Synonymer | Engelska ordet BAILIFF


BAILIFF

Definition av BAILIFF

  1. (historia) fogde
  2. (juridik, brittisk engelska) utmätningsman
  3. (juridik, amerikansk engelska) tjänsteman med ansvar för fångar som infinner sig i en domstol

20

Antal bokstäver

7

Är palindrom

Nej

14
AI
AIL
BA
BAI
FF
IF

9

3

15

111
AB
ABI
AF
AFB
AFF
AFI
AFL


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Exempel på hur man kan använda BAILIFF i en mening

  • His father, Pierre de Bèze, bailiff of Vézelay, descended from a Burgundian noble family; his mother, Marie Bourdelot, was known for her generosity.
  • Located in the current-day Netherlands, it acquired its name from the bailiff of 's-Hertogenbosch, who administered the area in the name of the Dukes of Brabant.
  • In addition to being seigneur of Renescure, Watten and Saint-Venant, Clyte became bailiff of Flanders for the Duke of Burgundy in 1436, and had been taken prisoner at the Battle of Agincourt in 1415.
  • In modern England and Wales, the position of mayor descends from the feudal lord's bailiff or reeve (see borough).
  • When the town was incorporated in 1860, the commissioners had slate sidewalks installed, erected street lamps, and hired a lamplighter who doubled as bailiff and street maintenance man.
  • Stewart mentioned that the bailiff of Bolsover was Henry Smith, Jane Mason was housekeeper, and the maids were Jane Jackson and Elizabeth Wise.
  • She was the widow of Clement Dumaresq and daughter of the bailiff Helier de Carteret, the uncle and namesake to the Seigneur of Sark.
  • Even if the presence of the fortress and king's bailiff gave Vardø a certain degree of permanence and stability not experienced by other fishing communities in Finnmark, the town's size and importance waxed and waned with the changing fortunes of the fisheries.
  • Arne Askildsen (1898–1982), a politician and bailiff of Mandal and Halse og Harkmark from 1928–1968, except during WWII.
  • Bertil Ohlin was raised in Klippan, Scania with seven siblings, where his father Elis was a civil servant and bailiff.
  • Adam Loftus was born in 1533, the second son of Edward Loftus, bailiff of Swineside in Coverdale, one of the Yorkshire Dales, for Coverham Abbey.
  • A bailiff is a manager, overseer or custodian – a legal officer to whom some degree of authority or jurisdiction is given.
  • From 1795 to 1797, he served as bailiff of the Italian-speaking districts of Lugano, Locarno, Mendrisio, and Val Maggia in the Ticino valley.
  • He crossed the Channel and was refused admittance to Calais by Warwick's adherents, but made himself master of the outlying fortress of Guisnes (appointing Andrew Trollope its bailiff).


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