Wieselspiele: Difference between revisions

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{{a|drafting|}}{{d|Wieselspiele|/ˈviːzl̩ʃpiːl/|n|}}
{{a|drafting|}}{{d|Wieselspiele|/ˈviːzl̩ʃpiːl/|n|}}
{{divhelvetica|Also “Wieselspielerei” <br>/ˈviːzl̩ʃpiːləˈra͜i/ ''(n.)''}}
{{divhelvetica|Also “Wieselspielerei” <br>/ˈviːzl̩ʃpiːləˈra͜i/ (''n.'')}}
A [[civil law]] expression not having direct equivalent under the [[common law]] but loosely translated as “[[weaselry]]”. A kind of [[flannel]] — a gimmick made to look meaningful without being — although characterised by malice rather than the usual lexical timidity and general conceptual incompetence that distinguishes an [[Mediocre lawyer|English or American lawyer]]’s [[verbiage]].
A [[civil law]] expression not having direct equivalent under the [[common law]] but loosely translated as “[[weaselry]]”. A kind of [[flannel]] — a gimmick made to look meaningful without being — although characterised by malice rather than the usual lexical timidity and general conceptual incompetence that distinguishes an [[Mediocre lawyer|English or American lawyer]]’s [[verbiage]].



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Wieselspiele
/ˈviːzl̩ʃpiːl/ (n.)

Also “Wieselspielerei”
/ˈviːzl̩ʃpiːləˈra͜i/ (n.)

A civil law expression not having direct equivalent under the common law but loosely translated as “weaselry”. A kind of flannel — a gimmick made to look meaningful without being — although characterised by malice rather than the usual lexical timidity and general conceptual incompetence that distinguishes an English or American lawyer’s verbiage.

Convolution, when practiced by eine rechtsanwältin.

See also