different between invalidate vs diriment
invalidate
English
Etymology
From in- +? Latin valere (“to be strong”); literally, “to make not strong”.
Pronunciation
- (UK) IPA(key): /??n?væl.?.de?t/
Verb
invalidate (third-person singular simple present invalidates, present participle invalidating, simple past and past participle invalidated)
- To make invalid. Especially applied to contract law.
- The circuit court judge's ruling was invalidated by a superior judge.
Synonyms
- vitiate
Antonyms
- validate
Translations
Italian
Verb
invalidate
- second-person plural present indicative of invalidare
- second-person plural imperative of invalidare
- feminine plural of invalidato
invalidate From the web:
- what invalidates wudu
- what invalidates a will
- what invalidates salah
- what invalidated the missouri compromise
- what invalidates a contract
- what invalidates a confession
- what invalidates the airworthiness certificate
- what invalidates nikah
diriment
English
Etymology
Latin dirim?ns (“separating”).
Adjective
diriment (not comparable)
- (religion, of an impediment to marriage) Serving to invalidate an attempted marriage.
See also
- impedient
Latin
Verb
diriment
- third-person plural future active indicative of dirim?
diriment From the web:
- what diriment impediment
- what does detriment mean
- what does diriment
- what does voto dirimente mean
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