Home
3D
Stylish English
Comic Cartoon
Curly
Decorative
Dingbats
Dotted
Famous
Fire
Gothic
Groovy
Handwriting
Headline
more
Horror
Ice Snow
Modern
Outline
Russian
Sci Fi
Script
Valentine
Alien
Animals
Army Stencil
Asian
Bitmap Pixel
Black Letter
Blurred
Brush
Celtic Irish
Chalk Crayon
Christmas
Computer
Disney
Distorted
Easter
Fantasy
Fixed Width
Graffiti
Greek Roman
Halloween
Italic
LCD
Medieval
Mexican
Movies Tv
Old English
Old School
Pointed
Retro
Rock Stone
Rounded
School
Scratched
Serif
Square
Trash
Typewriter
USA
Various
Western
English to English Dictionary ⇛
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
I
J
K
L
M
N
O
P
Q
R
S
T
U
V
W
X
Y
Z
Definition of warrant
Thanks for using this online dictionary, we have been helping millions of people improve their use of the english language with its free online services. English definition of warrant is as below...
Warrant
(n.) To
secure
to, as a
grantee,
an
estate
granted;
to
assure..
Lern More About Warrant
☛ Wiki Definition of Warrant
☛ Wiki Article of Warrant
☛ Google Meaning of Warrant
☛ Google Search for Warrant
Constable
::
Constable
(n.) An
officer
of the peace
having
power as a
conservator
of the
public
peace,
and bound to
execute
the
warrants
of
judicial
officers..
Locate
::
Locate
(v. t.) To
designate
the site or place of; to
define
the
limits
of; as, to
locate
a
public
building;
to
locate
a
mining
claim;
to
locate
(the land
granted
by) a land
warrant..
Warrant
::
Warrant
(n.) An
official
certificate
of
appointment
issued
to an
officer
of lower rank than a
commissioned
officer.
See
Warrant
officer,
below..
Warrantise
::
Warrantise
(n.)
Authority;
security;
warranty.
Mittimus
::
Mittimus
(n.) A
precept
or
warrant
granted
by a
justice
for
committing
to
prison
a party
charged
with
crime;
a
warrant
of
commitment
to
prison.
Warranted
::
Warranted
(imp. & p. p.) of
Warran.
Warranty
::
Warranty
(n.) A
covenant
real,
whereby
the
grantor
of an
estate
of
freehold
and his heirs were bound to
warrant
and
defend
the
title,
and, in case of
eviction
by title
paramount,
to yield other lands of equal value in
recompense.
This
warranty
has long singe
become
obsolete,
and its place
supplied
by
personal
covenants
for
title.
Among these is the
covenant
of
warranty,
which runs with the land, and is in the
nature
of a real
covenant..
Cocket
::
Cocket
(n.) A
customhouse
seal; a
certified
document
given to a
shipper
as a
warrant
that his goods have been duly
entered
and have paid duty.
Agnosticism
::
Agnosticism
(n.) The
doctrine
that the
existence
of a
personal
Deity,
an
unseen
world,
etc., can be
neither
proved
nor
disproved,
because
of the
necessary
limits
of the human mind (as
sometimes
charged
upon
Hamilton
and
Mansel),
or
because
of the
insufficiency
of the
evidence
furnished
by
physical
and
physical
data, to
warrant
a
positive
conclusion
(as
taught
by the
school
of
Herbert
Spencer);
--
opposed
alike
dogmatic
skepticism
and to
dogmatic
theism..
Warrant
::
Warrant
(n.) To
secure
to, as a
grantee,
an
estate
granted;
to
assure..
Familiarity
::
Familiarity
(n.)
Anything
said or done by one
person
to
another
unceremoniously
and
without
constraint;
esp., in the pl., such
actions
and words as
propriety
and
courtesy
do not
warrant;
liberties..
Warranty
::
Warranty
(n.) A
stipulation
or
engagement
by a party
insured,
that
certain
things,
relating
to the
subject
of
insurance,
or
affecting
the risk,
exist,
or shall
exist,
or have been done, or shall be done. These
warranties,
when
express,
should
appear
in the
policy;
but there are
certain
implied
warranties..
Branch
::
Branch
(n.) A
warrant
or
commission
given to a
pilot,
authorizing
him to pilot
vessels
in
certain
waters..
Paralogize
::
Paralogize
(v. i.) To
reason
falsely;
to draw
conclusions
not
warranted
by the
premises.
Warrantable
::
Warrantable
(a.)
Authorized
by
commission,
precept,
or
right;
justifiable;
defensible;
as, the
seizure
of a thief is
always
warrantable
by law and
justice;
falsehood
is never
warrantable..
Guarantor
::
Guarantor
(n.) One who makes or gives a
guaranty;
a
warrantor;
a
surety.
Obtrude
::
Obtrude
(v. t.) To
thrust
impertinently;
to
present
without
warrant
or
solicitation;
as, to
obtrude
one's self upon a
company..
Vouch
::
Vouch (v. t.) To call into court to
warrant
and
defend,
or to make good a
warranty
of
title..
Unwarrantable
::
Unwarrantable
(a.) Not
warrantable;
indefensible;
not
vindicable;
not
justifiable;
illegal;
unjust;
improper.
Warranties
::
Warranties
(pl. ) of
Warrant.
Random Fonts
Most Popular
Privacy Policy
GDPR Policy
Terms & Conditions
Contact Us