Writ


law.

a formal order under seal, issued in the name of a sovereign, government, court, or other competent authority, enjoining the officer or other person to whom it is issued or addressed to do or refrain from some specified act.
(in early english law) any formal doc-ment in letter form, under seal, and in the sovereign’s name.

something written; a writing:
sacred writ.
a simple past tense and past participle of write.
to trace or form (characters, letters, words, etc.) on the surface of some material, as with a pen, pencil, or other instrument or means; inscribe:
write your name on the board.
to express or communicate in writing; give a written account of.
to fill in the blank sp-ces of (a printed form) with writing:
to write a check.
to execute or produce by setting down words, figures, etc.:
to write two copies of a letter.
to compose and produce in words or characters duly set down:
to write a letter to a friend.
to produce as author or composer:
to write a sonnet; to write a symphony.
to trace significant characters on, or mark or cover with writing.
to cause to be apparent or unmistakable:
honesty is written on his face.
computers. to transfer (information, data, programs, etc.) from storage to secondary storage or an output medium.
stock exchange. to sell (options).
to underwrite.
to trace or form characters, words, etc., with a pen, pencil, or other instrument or means, or as a pen or the like does:
he writes with a pen.
to write as a profession or occupation: she writes for the daily inquirer.
to express ideas in writing.
to write a letter or letters, or communicate by letter:
write if you get work.
to compose or work as a writer or author.
computers. to write into a secondary storage device or output medium.
write down,

to set down in writing; record; note.
to direct one’s writing to a less intelligent reader or audience:
he writes down to the public.

write in,

to vote for (a candidate not listed on the ballot) by writing his or her name on the ballot.
to include in or add to a text by writing:
do not write in corrections on the galley.
to request something by mail:
if interested, please write in for details.

write off,

to cancel an entry in an account, as an unpaid and uncollectable debt.
to regard as worthless, lost, obsolete, etc.; decide to forget:
to write off their bad experience.
to amortize:
the new equipment was written off in three years.

write out,

to put into writing.
to write in full form; state completely.
to exhaust the capacity or resources of by excessive writing:
he’s just another author who has written himself out.

write up,

to put into writing, especially in full detail:
write up a report.
to present to public notice in a written description or account.
accounting. to make an excessive valuation of (an -sset).

contemporary examples

what’s so funny about mormons? jacob bernstein march 5, 2011
the photo that could doom the democrats peter beinart february 28, 2010
al qaeda’s most dangerous stronghold bruce riedel november 10, 2013
glenn beck is now selling hipster clothes. really. ana marie c-x december 19, 2014
george w. bush ‘comes out’ as artist lizzie crocker february 7, 2013

historical examples

punch, or the london charivari, vol. 1, september 5, 1841 various
blackwood’s edinburgh magazine, no. 327 various
chambers’s twentieth century dictionary (part 1 of 4: a-d) various
in the midst of alarms robert barr
the journal to stella jonathan swift

noun
(law) (formerly) a doc-ment under seal, issued in the name of the crown or a court, commanding the person to whom it is addressed to do or refrain from doing some specified act official name claim
(archaic) a piece or body of writing: holy writ
verb
(archaic or dialect) a past tense and past participle of write
writ large, plain to see; very obvious
verb writes, writing, wrote, written
to draw or mark (symbols, words, etc) on a surface, usually paper, with a pen, pencil, or other instrument
to describe or record (ideas, experiences, etc) in writing
to compose (a letter) to or correspond regularly with (a person, organization, etc)
(transitive; may take a clause as object) to say or communicate by letter: he wrote that he was on his way
(transitive) (informal, mainly us & canadian) to send a letter to (a person, etc)
to write (words) in cursive as opposed to printed style
(transitive) to be sufficiently familiar with (a specified style, language, etc) to use it in writing
to be the author or composer of (books, music, etc)
(transitive) to fill in the details for (a doc-ment, form, etc)
(transitive) to draw up or draft
(transitive) to produce by writing: he wrote ten pages
(transitive) to show clearly: envy was written all over his face
(transitive) to spell, inscribe, or ent-tle
(transitive) to ordain or prophesy: it is written
(transitive) to sit (an examination)
(intransitive) to produce writing as specified
(computing) to record (data) in a location in a storage device compare read1 (sense 16)
(transitive) compare underwrite (sense 3a)
n.
v.

for men use to write an evill turne in marble stone, but a good turne in the dust. [more, 1513]

to write (something) off (1680s) originally was from accounting; figurative sense is recorded from 1889. write-in “unlisted candidate” is recorded from 1932.

write down
write in
write off
write one’s own ticket
write out
write up

Read Also:

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    a writ issued by a superior colonial court authorizing officers of the british crown to summon aid and enter and search any premises.

  • Writ-of-election

    a writ by an executive authority requiring the holding of an election, especially one issued by a governor to require a special election for filling a vacancy in the representation from a state.

  • Writ-of-error

    a writ issued by an appellate court to the court of record where a case was tried, requiring that the record of the trial be sent to the appellate court for examination of alleged errors.

  • Writ-of-extent

    extent (def 4a).

  • Writhen

    twisted. historical examples the vinland champions ottilie a. liljencrantz the danish history, books i-ix saxo grammaticus (“saxo the learned”) the destroying angel louis joseph vance motor tours in yorkshire mrs. rodolph stawell the manchester rebels of the fatal ’45 william harrison ainsworth how the raven died alfred henry lewis california mary austin the devil’s elixir […]


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