Definition of Domicil

1. to domicile [v -ED, -ING, -S] - See also: domicile

Lexicographical Neighbors of Domicil

domesticators
domesticise
domesticities
domesticity
domesticize
domestick
domestics
domestique
domett
dometts
domeykite
domeykites
domic
domical
domically
domicil (current term)
domicile
domiciled
domiciles
domiciliar
domiciliaries
domiciliars
domiciliary
domiciliate
domiciliated
domiciliates
domiciliating
domiciliation
domiciliations
domiciling

Literary usage of Domicil

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. Reports of Cases Argued and Determined in the High Court of Chancery: During by Great Britain Court of Chancery, Edward Thurlow Thurlow, Alexander Wedderburn Rosslyn, Jonathan Cogswell Perkins (1844)
"THE succession to the personal estate of an intestate is regulated by the law of that place, which was his domicil at the time of his death. ..."

2. A Treatise on the Law of Executors and Administrators by Edward Vaughan Williams, Walter Vere Vaughan Williams (1877)
"An Anglo-Indian is not, for all purposes, nn English domicil. Kay, 341. [A distinction is to he observed between those cases in which the question relates ..."

3. The Law Reports by John Fraser Macqueen, Great Britain Parliament. House of Lords (1869)
"This is called the domicil of origin, and is involuntary. ... When a domicil of choice is acquired the domicil of origin is in abeyance; ..."

4. A Treatise on the Conflict of Laws: Or, Private International Law by Francis Wharton (1906)
"By the law of domicil, capacity, if not absolutely and ubiquitously ... By the law of domicil state taxation is adjusted. By the last domicil of a decedent ..."

5. Commentaries on the Conflict of Laws, Foreign and Domestic by Joseph Story, Melville Madison Bigelow (1883)
"451), 'The qualification that he must abandon the new domicil with the special ... The more consistent theory is, that the abandonment of the new domicil is ..."

6. Conflict of Laws, Or, Private International Law by Raleigh Colston Minor (1901)
"The domicil of origin, it will be remembered, is assigned at the very moment ... This is a domicil of choice. But it often becomes necessary for the law to ..."

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