Remedy
71remedy — I. n. 1. Cure, antidote, specific, restorative, help, medicine, corrective, counteractive. 2. Reparation, redress, restoration, restitution, counteraction. 3. Relief, aid, help, assistance. II. v. a. 1. Cure, heal, help. 2. Repair, redress,… …
72Remedy — ♦ A legal procedure used to enforce a right or to redress an injury. (Hogue, Arthur R. Origins of the Common Law, 257) …
73remedy — rem·e·dy …
74remedy — Lā au (medicine); ke ehina hana (solution, as to a problem) …
75remedy — The means employed to enforce a right or redress an injury. Paulsen v Remecke, 181 La 917, 160 So 629, 97 ALR 1184. The means or method whereby a cause of action or corresponding obligation is effectuated and by which a wrong is redressed and… …
76remedy — n. & v. n. (pl. ies) (often foll. by for, against) 1 a medicine or treatment (for a disease etc.). 2 a means of counteracting or removing anything undesirable. 3 redress; legal or other reparation. 4 the margin within which coins as minted may… …
77Civil remedy — Remedy Rem e*dy (r?m ? d?), n.; pl. {Remedies} ( d?z). [L. remedium; pref. re re + mederi to heal, to cure: cf. F. rem[ e]de remedy, rem[ e]dier to remedy. See {Medical}.] [1913 Webster] 1. That which relieves or cures a disease; any medicine or… …
78Remedy worse than the discase. — См. Овчинка выделки не стоит …
Большой толково-фразеологический словарь Михельсона (оригинальная орфография)
79remedy by due course of law — Reparation for injury ordered by a tribunal having jurisdiction, in due course of procedure, after a fair hearing. Hanson v Kreheiel, 68 Kan 670, 75 P 1041. See due course of law; due process of law …
80remedy over — Recourse against a third person to recover a sum which one has been compelled to pay to another. See third party action …