prist
prist (prist). [Law French] Hist. Ready. • In oral pleading, this term was used to express a joinder of issue.
prist (prist). [Law French] Hist. Ready. • In oral pleading, this term was used to express a joinder of issue.
ad pristinum statum (ad pris-ti-n[schwa]m stay-t[schwa]m). [Latin] Hist. To its pristine condition.
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uncore prist ([schwa]n[g]-kor prist). [Law French “still ready”] Hist. A plea by which a party alleges readiness to pay or perform what is justly demanded. “Yet sometimes, after tender and refusal of a debt, if the creditor harasses his debtor with an action, it then becomes necessary for the defendant to acknowledge the debt, and
unques prist ([schwa]n[g]-kweez prist). [Law French] Always ready. • This is another form of tout temps prist.
tout temps prist et encore prist.[Law French] Common-law pleading. The clause in a plea of tender stating that the pleader is and always has been ready to pay. See PLEA OF TENDER.
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toujours et uncore prist 〈法〉时刻准备着 常用于偿还债务的答辩。
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Law French. The corrupted form of the Norman French language that arose in England in the centuries after William the Conqueror invaded England in 1066 and that was used for several centuries as the primary language of the English legal system; the Anglo-French used in medieval England in judicial proceedings, pleadings, and lawbooks. — Abbr.