- accept custom - Accepted rule or usage - Get together - The act of coming together; the state of being
together; union; coalition. - General agreement or concurrence; arbitrary custom;
usage; conventionality. - A meeting or an assembly of persons, esp. of
delegates or representatives, to accomplish some specific object, --
civil, social, political, or ecclesiastical. - An extraordinary assembly of the parkiament or
estates of the realm, held without the king's writ, -- as the assembly
which restored Charles II. to the throne, and that which declared the
throne to be abdicated by James II.
- Plot involving scams and illegal copying - Secret plan - Secret plan, plot - A combination of men for an evil purpose; an agreement,
between two or more persons, to commit a crime in concert, as treason;
a plot. - A concurence or general tendency, as of circumstances,
to one event, as if by agreement. - An agreement, manifesting itself in words or deeds, by
which two or more persons confederate to do an unlawful act, or to use
unlawful to do an act which is lawful; confederacy.
- Standard kind of behaviour at a conference? - Formed by agreement or compact; stipulated. - Growing out of, or depending on, custom or tacit
agreement; sanctioned by general concurrence or usage; formal. - Based upon tradition, whether religious and
historical or of artistic rules. - Abstracted; removed from close representation of
nature by the deliberate selection of what is to be represented and
what is to be rejected; as, a conventional flower; a conventional
shell. Cf. Conventionalize, v. t.
- ... operandi: method of working - The arrangement of, or mode of expressing, the terms of a
contract or conveyance. - A qualification involving the idea of variation or departure
from some general rule or form, in the way of either restriction or
enlargement, according to the circumstances of the case, as in the will
of a donor, an agreement between parties, and the like. - A fixed compensation or equivalent given instead of payment
of tithes in kind, expressed in full by the phrase modus decimandi.