Flannel: Difference between revisions
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*[[as the case may be]] | *[[as the case may be]] | ||
*[[by or on account of]] | *[[by or on account of]] | ||
*[[calculated]] | |||
*[[for the avoidance of doubt]] | *[[for the avoidance of doubt]] | ||
*[[for the time being]] | *[[for the time being]] |
Revision as of 14:27, 29 November 2016
Flannel is a cotton material of a peculiarly absorbent character, used with abandon by diligent lawyers the world over, cut into small toweling squares.
Who, why, which or what —
Does flannelette flag?
Is it a towel? A kerchief? A hanky? Or rag?
Does it sit in your pocketbook, briefcase, satchel
Or bag?
Not to be confused with “verbiage”, flannel is calculated to make simple propositions seem complicated. For organisms of the genus causidicus mediocris, flannel has clear adaptive benefits in as much as it makes one think, “ho, look out, I’d better check this with legal”
- and/or
- any type, kind or variety
- all, or substantially all
- at all material times
- as the case may be
- by or on account of
- calculated
- for the avoidance of doubt
- for the time being
- from time to time
- however described
- if and to the extent that
- if any
- in any such case
- in the event that
- in whole or in part
- including, but not limited to
- may or may not be
- on an expedited basis
- on or about
- one or more
- or any part thereof
- shall
- shall be deemed
- suffers or permits
- Supplements, forms part of and is subject to
- The parties acknowledge that...
- together or alone
- unless and until
- upon the occurrence of
- unless otherwise agreed
- whether or not
- without limitation
Plain English Anatomy™
Noun | Verb | Adjective | Adverb | Preposition | Conjunction | Latin | Germany | Flannel | Legal triplicate | Nominalisation | Murder your darlings