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  • 91City of Akron v. Akron Center for Reproductive Health — Supreme Court of the United States Argued 30 November …

    Wikipedia

  • 92Paul Haughey — Paul C. Haughey (born January 16, 1954 in Toledo, Ohio, United States [ [http://www.martindale.com/lawyers/183391?PRV=OGO Private Practice Lawyer Profile, martindale.com] ] ) is a novelist, patent attorney and partner with the law firm Townsend… …

    Wikipedia

  • 93English contract law — is an influential system regulating the law of contract that operates in England and Wales. Its doctrines form the basis of contract law across the Commonwealth, including Australia, Canada, India, New Zealand and South Africa and more generally… …

    Wikipedia

  • 94inheritance — /in her i teuhns/, n. 1. something that is or may be inherited; property passing at the owner s death to the heir or those entitled to succeed; legacy. 2. the genetic characters transmitted from parent to offspring, taken collectively. 3.… …

    Universalium

  • 95duress — du·ress /du̇ res, dyu̇ / n [Anglo French duresce, literally, hardness, harshness, from Old French, from Latin duritia, from durus hard]: wrongful and usu. unlawful compulsion (as threats of physical violence) that induces a person to act against… …

    Law dictionary

  • 96reasonable accommodation — n: something done to accommodate a disabled person that does not jeopardize safety or pose an undue hardship for the party (as an employer) doing it; also: something done to accommodate a religious need that does not create undue hardship for an… …

    Law dictionary

  • 97Interpreting contracts in English law — is an area of English contract law, which concerns how the courts decide what an agreement means. It is settled law that the process is based on the objective view of a reasonable person, given the context in which the contracting parties made… …

    Wikipedia

  • 98coercion — co·er·cion /kō ər zhən, shən/ n: the use of express or implied threats of violence or reprisal (as discharge from employment) or other intimidating behavior that puts a person in immediate fear of the consequences in order to compel that person… …

    Law dictionary

  • 99pressure — I noun anxiety, anxiousness, brunt, brute force, burden, coercion, compulsion, constraining force, constraint, controlling power, crisis, drive, duress, encumbrance, exertion, exhortation, exigency, force, hardship, heaviness, hindrance,… …

    Law dictionary

  • 100influence — ▪ I. influence in‧flu‧ence 1 [ˈɪnfluəns] noun [countable, uncountable] power to have an effect on the way something happens or the way someone does something: • The car magazines have been gaining influence in recent years. • The banks directors… …

    Financial and business terms