Your Free Online Legal Dictionary • Featuring Black’s Law Dictionary, 2nd Ed.

TICKET THIS

When “this” and “that” refer to different things before expressed, “this” refers to the thing last mentioned, and “that” to the thing first mentioned. Russell v. Kennedy, 60 Pa. 251.

THIS DAY SIX MONTHS

Fixing “this day six months,” or “three months,” for the next stage of a bill, is one of the modes in which the house of lords and the house of commons reject

THISTLE-TAKE

It was a custom within the mauor of Halton, in Chester, that if, in driving beasts over a common, the driver permitted them to graze or take but a thistle, he should

THOROUGHFARE

The term means, according to its derivation, a street or passage through which one can fare, (travel;) that is, a street or highway affording an unobstructed exit at each end into another

THRAVE

In old English law. A measure of corn or grain, consisting of twenty- four sheaves or four shocks, six sheaves to every shock. Cowell.

THREAD

A middle line; a line running through the middle of a stream or road. See FILUM; FILUM AQU.E; FILUM VI^E.

THREAT

In criminal law. A menace; a declaration of one’s purpose or intention to work injury to the person, property, or rights of another. A threat has been defined to be any menace

THREATENING LETTERS

Sending threatening letters is the name of the offense of sending letters containing threats of the kinds recognized by the statute as criminal. See People v. Griffin, 2 Barb. (N. Y.) 429.

THREE-DOLLAR PIECE

A gold coin of the United States, of the value of three dollars; authorized by the seventh section of the act of February 21, 1853.

THRENGES

Vassals, but not of the lowest degree; those who held lands of the chief lord.

THRITHING

In Saxon and old English law. The third part of a county; a divisiou of a county consisting of three or more hundreds. Cowell. Corrupted to the modern “riding,” which is still

THROAT

In medical Jurisprudence. The front or anterior part of the neck. Where one was indicted for murder by “cutting the throat” of the deceased, it was held that the word “throat” was

THROUGH

This word is sometimes equivalent to “over;” as in a statute in reference to laying out a road “through” certain grounds. Ilyde Park v. Oakwoods Cemetery Ass’n, 119 111. 147, 7 N.

THRUSTING

Within the meaning of a criminal statute, “thrusting” is not necessarily an attack with a pointed weapon; It means pushing or driving with force, whether the point of the weapon be sharp

THRYMSA

A Saxon coin worth four- pence. Du Fresne.

THURINGIAN CODE

One of the “barbarian codes,” as they are termed; supposed by Montesquieu to have been given by Theod- oric, king of Austrasia, to the Thuringians, who were his subjects. Esprit des Lois,

THWERTNICK

In old English law. The custom of giving entertainments to a sheriff, etc., for three nights.

TICK

A colloquial expression for credit or trust; credit given for goods purchased.

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