remancipation
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From re- + mancipate + -ion.
Noun
[edit]remancipation
- The act of remancipating.
- 1929, The Journal of Egyptian Archaeology - Volumes 15-16, page 131:
- The question is of the pf.'s right to remancipation in the course of emancipation, whence a short mention of P. Lipa 40 (Meyer, Jur Pop., 9), where we find remancipations to the pf. ; but these are after first and second mancipations of a daughter, a point which the writer seems to overlook.
- 1930, Revue Du Barreau Canadien - Volume 8, page 625:
- Without this she would have had to be present for remancipation to take place and a malicious adulteress could thus have exposed an already injured husband to all the rigours of the statute.
- 1988, The Irish Jurist - Volume 23, page 122:
- The hostile argument is easily constructed: a mancipation to remancipate is at best merely a temporary arrangement, at worst a fraudulent collusion; and a remancipation after a mancipation is evidence in itself of an agreement and obligation to remancipate.