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Tick

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TICK, contracts. Credit; as, if a servant usually buy for the master upon tick, and the servant buy something without the master's order, yet, if the master were trusted by the trader, he is liable. 1 Show. 95; 3 Keb. 625; 10 Mod. 111; 3 Esp. R. 214; 4 Esp. R. 174.

A Law Dictionary, Adapted to the Constitution and Laws of the United States. By John Bouvier. Published 1856.
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References in periodicals archive
In a post on his Facebook page, Stephen said: "Just broke a Guinness World Record for 'The most amount of people making heart-shaped hand gestures.' "Another item ticked off the bucket list and an all-round great event to be part of!
The new production - which also features Julie - has new sketches, as well as all the best bits from last time round, covering everything that makes today's woman tick (or ticked off) - from the joys of teenagers, to the challenge of Ikea, the madness of holiday reps and the insanity of DIY.
LOUIS Walsh, below, has ticked off Adele for not getting back to work sooner after she had her baby.
The waste from 200 birds has ticked off residents, A pair of golf courses, a soccer complex and bike trails reek with goose feces.
26 (ANI): Former President Bill Clinton is "disturbed and ticked off" by much of what he's seen from the mid-term election campaign.
And, with just two months to go, she ticked off the toughest task of the lot when she jumped from an aeroplane 10,000ft above Peterlee.
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