different between oyer vs tyer
oyer
English
Etymology
From Anglo-Norman oyer (“hear”).
Noun
oyer (uncountable)
- (law, archaic) A hearing in a civil case which is based on the content of a document, in which the plaintiff is required to produce the document.
Usage notes
- A defendant who formally asks for oyer is said to crave oyer.
Related terms
- oyer and terminer
Anagrams
- Roye, yero, yore
Asturian
Etymology
From Latin aud?re, present active infinitive of audi?.
Verb
oyer
- to hear
- to listen
Conjugation
This verb needs an inflection-table template.
Related terms
- oyíu
Old French
Verb
oyer
- Alternative form of oïr
oyer From the web:
- what foyer means
- what does oyez mean
- what does oyer and terminer mean
- what does fueron mean
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- fueron in english
tyer
English
Noun
tyer (plural tyers)
- Dated form of tier; a person or device that ties.
Anagrams
- Trey, Tyre, trey, trye, tyre
Middle English
Noun
tyer
- (Kent) Alternative form of tere (“tear”)
tyer From the web:
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- what tyres are not made in china
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