devinare

devinare
DEVINÁ vb. I. tr. (Franţuzism) A prezice, a ghici. [< fr. deviner].
Trimis de LauraGellner, 04.04.2009. Sursa: DN

Dicționar Român. 2013.

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  • casus fortuitus non est sperandus, et nemo tenetur devinare — /keysas fortyuwatas non est sparindas, et niymow taniytar devaneriy/ A fortuitous event is not to be expected, and no one is bound to foresee it …   Black's law dictionary

  • casus fortuitus non est sperandus, et nemo tenetur devinare — /keysas fortyuwatas non est sparindas, et niymow taniytar devaneriy/ A fortuitous event is not to be expected, and no one is bound to foresee it …   Black's law dictionary

  • deviner — [ d(ə)vine ] v. tr. <conjug. : 1> • 1160; lat. pop. °devinare, class. divinare 1 ♦ Rare Révéler, comme fait un devin. ⇒ prédire, prophétiser. 2 ♦ Cour. Parvenir à connaître par conjecture, supposition, intuition. ⇒ découvrir, entrevoir,… …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • contingency — con·tin·gen·cy /kən tin jən sē/ n pl cies 1: the quality or state of being contingent 2: a contingent event or condition: as a: an event that may but is not certain to occur a contingency that made performance under the contract impossible b …   Law dictionary

  • accident — ac·ci·dent n: an unexpected usu. sudden event that occurs without intent or volition although sometimes through carelessness, unawareness, ignorance, or a combination of causes and that produces an unfortunate result (as an injury) for which the… …   Law dictionary

  • chance — I (fortuity) noun advantage, befalling, casus, circumstance, event, favorable time, fortuitousness, good fortune, happening, occasion, opening, suitable circumstance, time associated concepts: arise by chance, last clear chance II (possibility) …   Law dictionary

  • event — n 1: something that happens: occurrence 2: the issue or outcome of a legal action or proceeding as finally determined Merriam Webster’s Dictionary of Law. Merriam Webster. 1996 …   Law dictionary

  • divine — {{11}}divine (adj.) c.1300, from O.Fr. devin (12c.), from L. divinus of a god, from divus a god, related to deus god, deity (see ZEUS (Cf. Zeus)). Weakened sense of excellent had evolved by late 15c. {{12}}divine (n.) c.1300, soothsayer, from… …   Etymology dictionary

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