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单词 notary
释义

Definition of notary in English:

notary

(also notary public)
nounPlural notaries ˈnəʊt(ə)riˈnoʊdəri
  • A person authorized to perform certain legal formalities, especially to draw up or certify contracts, deeds, and other documents for use in other jurisdictions.

    公证人

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The most frightening thing is that you do most of it yourself, so I found myself constantly drawing enormous sums of cash from the bank and handing them over to the tax office, the lawyer, the notary, the vendor and so on.
    • They have to draw up all kinds of documents with notaries and lawyers and still these documents can be challenged.
    • The practice is so widespread that some notaries who witness real estate closings are said to set aside rooms for cash to change hands discreetly.
    • These would be produced - to much hilarity - to notaries when signing legal documents and on other official occasions.
    • The city yesterday opened the country's first judicial credit website, providing basic information to the public about local lawyers, law firms, notaries and community legal workers.
    • There's great ceremony to the final act of purchase, with sellers, buyers, bankers, lawyers and agents all meeting in a notary's office to sign the deed.
    • The collection of the third portion of the harvest was often subcontracted to a third party, by means of a private contract drawn up by a notary.
    • This was a sprawling metropolis of some several thousand people, crammed on top of each other in little twisting streets, populated by swindlers, thieves, prostitutes, magistrates, notaries and artists.
    • This agreement binds both parties to purchase/sell the property under the terms and conditions agreed, subject to clear title deed determined by the notary public.
    • When the holding of an auction was approved and the place and time were agreed upon, the notary drew up the conditions of sale.
    • He claims that Isaacs presented him with a business card, with ‘Isaacs and Associates, attorneys, notaries and conveyancers’ printed on it.
    • Completion is the definitive passage of the property title from vendor to buyer by a public document, or by private contract authenticated by a notary for the purpose of registration.
    • The next step is an exchange of contract executed before a notary public with the two parties' lawyers.
    • The heart of their study is a large sample of loan contracts drawn by Parisian notaries.
    • You could assemble two witnesses and a notary and sign the document yourself.
    • In Amsterdam, public notaries regularly recorded women's statements about the insulting maltreatment of their husbands.
    • It was drawn up by a notary and was a binding contract.
    • In January 1998 there was a reconciliation formally recorded by a notary, the effect of which may have been to suspend the custody order.
    • Seven lawyers and three notaries were among those arrested, the Madrid-based ministry said.
    • A Frankish royal writing office with archchancellor and notaries can be documented throughout the eighth, ninth, and tenth centuries.
    Synonyms
    lawyer, legal representative, legal practitioner, legal executive, notary public, advocate, attorney

Derivatives

  • notarial

  • adjective nəʊˈtɛːrɪəlnoʊˈtɛriəl
    • Given the vast amount of notarial records, the authors focused on 10 notaries at roughly ten-year increments.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Most other consular services are available only in Bangkok, including notarial work, marriage recording and passport replacement or renewal.
      • That the appellant notary acted in accordance with the then general notarial practice does not seem to be contested.
      • These figures correspond well with summaries based on notarial data.
      • The notarial deeds provided by the notary public offices in Shanghai are accepted in over 100 countries, which shows that local notaries' work is highly accurate.
  • notarially

  • adverbnəʊˈtɛːrɪəli

Origin

Middle English (in the sense 'clerk or secretary'): from Latin notarius 'secretary', from nota 'mark'.

Rhymes

coterie, protonotary, rotary, votary

Definition of notary in US English:

notary

(also notary public)
nounˈnoʊdəriˈnōdərē
  • A person authorized to perform certain legal formalities, especially to draw up or certify contracts, deeds, and other documents for use in other jurisdictions.

    公证人

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The collection of the third portion of the harvest was often subcontracted to a third party, by means of a private contract drawn up by a notary.
    • When the holding of an auction was approved and the place and time were agreed upon, the notary drew up the conditions of sale.
    • This agreement binds both parties to purchase/sell the property under the terms and conditions agreed, subject to clear title deed determined by the notary public.
    • You could assemble two witnesses and a notary and sign the document yourself.
    • The next step is an exchange of contract executed before a notary public with the two parties' lawyers.
    • The practice is so widespread that some notaries who witness real estate closings are said to set aside rooms for cash to change hands discreetly.
    • They have to draw up all kinds of documents with notaries and lawyers and still these documents can be challenged.
    • He claims that Isaacs presented him with a business card, with ‘Isaacs and Associates, attorneys, notaries and conveyancers’ printed on it.
    • The most frightening thing is that you do most of it yourself, so I found myself constantly drawing enormous sums of cash from the bank and handing them over to the tax office, the lawyer, the notary, the vendor and so on.
    • The city yesterday opened the country's first judicial credit website, providing basic information to the public about local lawyers, law firms, notaries and community legal workers.
    • Seven lawyers and three notaries were among those arrested, the Madrid-based ministry said.
    • In January 1998 there was a reconciliation formally recorded by a notary, the effect of which may have been to suspend the custody order.
    • This was a sprawling metropolis of some several thousand people, crammed on top of each other in little twisting streets, populated by swindlers, thieves, prostitutes, magistrates, notaries and artists.
    • It was drawn up by a notary and was a binding contract.
    • A Frankish royal writing office with archchancellor and notaries can be documented throughout the eighth, ninth, and tenth centuries.
    • In Amsterdam, public notaries regularly recorded women's statements about the insulting maltreatment of their husbands.
    • These would be produced - to much hilarity - to notaries when signing legal documents and on other official occasions.
    • Completion is the definitive passage of the property title from vendor to buyer by a public document, or by private contract authenticated by a notary for the purpose of registration.
    • There's great ceremony to the final act of purchase, with sellers, buyers, bankers, lawyers and agents all meeting in a notary's office to sign the deed.
    • The heart of their study is a large sample of loan contracts drawn by Parisian notaries.
    Synonyms
    lawyer, legal representative, legal practitioner, legal executive, notary public, advocate, attorney

Origin

Middle English (in the sense ‘clerk or secretary’): from Latin notarius ‘secretary’, from nota ‘mark’.

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更新时间:2024/10/19 16:30:18