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stellionate
[ stel-yuh-nit, -neyt ]
noun
Civil Law, Scots Law.
- any crime of unspecified class that involves fraud, especially one that involves the selling of the same property to different people.
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˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins
Origin of stellionate1
1615–25; < Latin ²õ³Ù±ð±ô±ô¾±Å²ÔÄå³Ù³Ü²õ deceit, underhandedness, equivalent to ²õ³Ù±ð±ô±ô¾±Å²Ô- (stem of ²õ³Ù±ð±ô±ô¾±Å ) lizard, crafty person + -Äå³Ù³Ü²õ -ate 3
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Example Sentences
Examples have not been reviewed.
It existed, indeed, in ancient Rome, and was comprehended under the general term of stellionate, from stelio, a little subtle serpent, common in Italy.
From
Thus a too artful fraud causes the aggravating crime called stellionate, and a cheat becomes a forger when he has the cunning to sap the very foundations of our security in written documents.
From
This sale is really a stellionate and an extortion; but by the legal fiction of the right of property, this same sale, severely punished, we know not why, in other cases, is a source of profit and value to the proprietor.
From
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