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#11
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Lawyers use the term. Suedo podia means false position. In law it
isn't taken as necessary false but an alteration of the original position. Here's how it's used. A plaintiff, say, pleads a contract against you when its existence is by no means certain. You plead back that no contract exists but there was a relationship and you've been damaged in tort. So, it is kind of a dance where you position your opponent to be slayed by your arguments. Bob Sherin, W4ASX |
#12
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![]() How come it does not appear in Black's Law Dictionary? "Bob Sherin, W4ASX" wrote in message ups.com... Lawyers use the term. Suedo podia means false position. In law it isn't taken as necessary false but an alteration of the original position. Here's how it's used. A plaintiff, say, pleads a contract against you when its existence is by no means certain. You plead back that no contract exists but there was a relationship and you've been damaged in tort. So, it is kind of a dance where you position your opponent to be slayed by your arguments. Bob Sherin, W4ASX |
#13
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![]() Lardass posing as a woman whined: "Thrasher Remailer" wrote in message ... In article "Noballs whiny **** Davies" whined: You had Poor whiny **** Lardass Lloyd Austin Davies, (N0VP)Nadless Zero Vaginal Faced Pussy, he has to get others to fight his battles for him. What a pussy! BTW, what is a "suedo podia"? What's the matter, Lardass, did Bob use words your tiny little pea brain couldn't know because they weren't from "Dr. Who" or "Star Trek," you mentally ill genetic reject and fired pizza BOY? // Of course (whines) Of course, you post without knowing what the hell you are talking about, that is.... Nice to see you finally embrace your inner woman, Davies, you are just a whiny **** deep down inside. |
#14
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![]() Anon wrote: How come it does not appear in Black's Law Dictionary? Because you can't read it with your head up your fat ass like that. "Bob Sherin, W4ASX" wrote in message ups.com... Lawyers use the term. Suedo podia means false position. In law it isn't taken as necessary false but an alteration of the original position. Here's how it's used. A plaintiff, say, pleads a contract against you when its existence is by no means certain. You plead back that no contract exists but there was a relationship and you've been damaged in tort. So, it is kind of a dance where you position your opponent to be slayed by your arguments. Bob Sherin, W4ASX |
#15
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It appears Bob is misusing the term. In another string in this
group, Wayne Mackleroy appears to properly identify it as a biological term. The term cannot be found in Black's Law Dictionary. Clarance "Anon" wrote in message ... How come it does not appear in Black's Law Dictionary? "Bob Sherin, W4ASX" wrote in message ups.com... Lawyers use the term. Suedo podia means false position. In law it isn't taken as necessary false but an alteration of the original position. Here's how it's used. A plaintiff, say, pleads a contract against you when its existence is by no means certain. You plead back that no contract exists but there was a relationship and you've been damaged in tort. So, it is kind of a dance where you position your opponent to be slayed by your arguments. Bob Sherin, W4ASX |
#16
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Just saw this post, Clarence, and jumped to it since you discovered a
misstatement. At all times, I want to be as accurate and authoritative as possible. When it turns out wrong, the mistake needs to be ballyhooed. First, naturally I spelled what I wanted to say wrong. Suedo is, of course, spelled correctly, pseudo. It is in Black's, meaning "false." So far, so good, but here's where I get into trouble. Podia is apparently a biological term meaning feet. My notion that podia meant position is wrong. If it means feet, then my usage needs a further explanation lest anyone think I'm phony. Much of my legal education came from my Father, born in 1898, deceased in 1988. He grew up on Latin and the common law. Psuedo podia is a term he used and I imitated, assuming its meaning as false position. I find it nowhere current in relation to the law. But it isn't unusual that Dad used terms grounded in an earlier era that are no longer used. Yet no longer in Black's is hard to fathom. Another word he taught was demurrer, a legal term no longer used but very much in Black's. And so, I misused a term, and this reply is to set the record straight. Clarence, thanks for your astute follow-up. Bob Sherin, W4ASX |
#17
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![]() "Bob Sherin, W4ASX" wrote in message oups.com... Just saw this post, Clarence, and jumped to it since you discovered a misstatement//////////SNIPPED///////////// BLAH BLAH BLAH BLAH BLAH BLAH BLAH BLAH BLAH BLAH................ad nauseam |
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