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Word Meanings - REMAND - Book Publishers vocabulary database

To recommit; to send back. Remand it to its former place. South. Then were they remanded to the cage again. Bunyan.

Possible synonyms: (Same meaning words of REMAND)

Related words: (words related to REMAND)

  • ASSIGNEE
    In England, the persons appointed, under a commission of bankruptcy, to manage the estate of a bankrupt for the benefit of his creditors. (more info) A person to whom an assignment is made; a person appointed or deputed by another to do some act,
  • TRANSMITTER
    One who, or that which, transmits; specifically, that portion of a telegraphic or telephonic instrument by means of which a message is sent; -- opposed to receiver.
  • TRANSPORTING
    That transports; fig., ravishing. Your transporting chords ring out. Keble.
  • EXCHANGE EDITOR
    An editor who inspects, and culls from, periodicals, or exchanges, for his own publication.
  • TRANSPORTAL
    Transportation; the act of removing from one locality to another. "The transportal of seeds in the wool or fur of quadrupeds." Darwin.
  • TRANSPORTABILITY
    The quality or state of being transportable.
  • REMAND
    To recommit; to send back. Remand it to its former place. South. Then were they remanded to the cage again. Bunyan.
  • ASSIGNABILITY
    The quality of being assignable.
  • TRANSPORTED
    Conveyed from one place to another; figuratively, carried away with passion or pleasure; entranced. -- Trans*port"ed*ly, adv. -- Trans*port"ed*ness, n.
  • ASSIGN
    To transfer, or make over to another, esp. to transfer to, and vest in, certain persons, called assignees, for the benefit of creditors. To assign dower, to set out by metes and bounds the widow's share or portion in an estate. Kent. (more info)
  • ASSIGNATION
    1. The act of assigning or allotting; apportionment. This order being taken in the senate, as touching the appointment and assignation of those provinces. Holland. 2. An appointment of time and place for meeting or interview; -- used chiefly of
  • CONVEYER
    1. One who, or that which, conveys or carries, transmits or transfers. 2. One given to artifices or secret practices; a juggler; a cheat; a thief. Shak.
  • TRANSLATE
    To remove, as a bishop, from one see to another. "Fisher, Bishop of Rochester, when the king would have translated him from that poor bishopric to a better, . . . refused." Camden. 5. To render into another language; to express the sense of in the
  • TRANSPORT
    1. To carry or bear from one place to another; to remove; to convey; as, to transport goods; to transport troops. Hakluyt. 2. To carry, or cause to be carried, into banishment, as a criminal; to banish. 3. To carry away with vehement emotion, as
  • TRANSMITTIBLE
    Capable of being transmitted; transmissible.
  • TRANSPORTABLE
    1. Capable of being transported. 2. Incurring, or subject to, the punishment of transportation; as, a transportable offense.
  • FORWARDLY
    Eagerly; hastily; obtrusively.
  • TRANSFEREE
    The person to whom a transfer in made.
  • EXCHANGEABILITY
    The quality or state of being exchangeable. The law ought not be contravened by an express article admitting the exchangeability of such persons. Washington.
  • TRANSPORTER
    One who transports.
  • MISTRANSPORT
    To carry away or mislead wrongfully, as by passion. Bp. Hall.
  • REEXCHANGE
    To exchange anew; to reverse .
  • RECONVEY
    1. To convey back or to the former place; as, to reconvey goods. 2. To transfer back to a former owner; as, to reconvey an estate.
  • TREMANDO
    Trembling; -- used as a direction to perform a passage with a general shaking of the whole chord.
  • MISTRANSLATE
    To translate erroneously.
  • MISASSIGN
    To assign wrongly.

 

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