different between nulification vs annulment
nulification
nulification From the web:
- what nullification mean
- what does nullification mean
- nullification crisis
- what does nullification
- what did nullification mean
- jury nullification
- what caused the nullification crisis
- nullification theory
annulment
English
Etymology
Recorded since the 15th century (sense destruction); from annul (from Middle English annullen, from Middle French annuller, from Latin annullare, from ad (“to”) + nullus (“not any, nothing”) + verbal ending -are) + -ment (“means to”) (from Latin -mentum).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /??n?l.m?nt/
Noun
annulment (countable and uncountable, plural annulments)
- An act or instance of annulling.
- The state of having been annulled.
- (law) An invalidation of something, especially a legal contract.
- (law) A legal (notably judicial) declaration that a marriage is invalid; the procedure leading to it.
- (archaic) Total destruction.
Synonyms
- abolition
- nullification (cognate)
- cancellation
Translations
annulment From the web:
- what annulment means
- what's annulment marriage
- what's annulment papers
- what annulment means in spanish
- what is annulment in the philippines
- what is annulment of marriage in india
- what is annulment and divorce
- what is annulment vs divorce
Share
Tweet
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
you may also like
- nulification vs annulment
- swelted vs melted
- spelted vs swelted
- swelted vs welted
- swelted vs swelter
- swelted vs sweated
- swelled vs swelted
- melted vs melty
- felty vs melty
- melty vs malty
- meaty vs melty
- melts vs melty
- melt vs melty
- melted vs meltted
- harangue vs prolixity
- prolixity vs prate
- prolixity vs tediousness
- ymara vs pleonastic
- pleonastic vs tautological
- redundant vs pleonastic