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"a right in a thing" - contrast ius ad rem.
Ad rem (to the matter)
Ad rem as said before you will be fine with 30% DEET.
'Ad Rem' was his family's motto.
Compare jus ad rem.
The action was a bar to actio furti and any action ad rem persequendam.
This was followed by the 1989 experimental plasticine and coal powder animation, Ad rém ("Ad rem")
This resulted in a Veinoplus patent (assigned to Ad Rem Technology) and to more developments of novel electro-stimulation devices/techniques.
"Abuttal," "ad rem," "damnify," "deforciant" and "mittimus" aside, it is far easier to add a word to a dictionary than to take one out.
The school motto is "Ad Rem Mox Nox", which roughly translates as "Time is short, get to work" or more specifically "Get it done before nightfall".
Jus ad rem, a term of the civil law, meaning "a right to a thing" - distinguished from jus in re, which is dominion over a thing as against all persons.
Ingenium felix, inventio, lucidus ordo, Gratia, majestas, ad rem bene congrua verba.
Henry Spelman's Archæologus in modum Glosarii ad rem antiquam posteriorem, which was published in London in 1626 cites the Pec-setna.
Commentaria in omnes pene Juris Civilis titulos ad rem nauticam pertinentes (Leuven, 1556; Lyon, 1647; Amsterdam, 1668)
Ioannes Casa an paiderastìas crimen defenderit, in: Observationes selectae ad rem litterariam spectantes, Renger, Halae 1707, vol.
Lord Bessborough, the Governor General in 1931, laid the commemorative cornerstone of the airbase, which had the motto, "Per Ardua ad Rem," or "Through Adversity to the Good" .
Moreover, Lucretian stock phrases like nunc ad rem redeo ("now I return to the matter at hand") give Horace's philosophical "conversations" (Sermones) a subtly Lucretian flavor .
The disposition of contemporary civil law jurists is to use the term jus ad rem as descriptive of a right without possession, and jus in re as descriptive of a right accompanied by possession.
Recension B, which resembles Recession A, is contained in a 17th century Latin treatise, Archaeologus in Modum Glossarii ad rem antiquam posteriorem, written by Henry Spelman in 1626.
The authors noted that "public discontent at the level and inherently regressive nature of the ad rem licence fee is noticeable by its absence, particularly in contrast to the difficulties associated with the introduction of some ad rem service charges, e.g. bin and water charges."