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collateral
(redirected from collaterality)

   Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Medical, Financial, Encyclopedia, Wikipedia, Hutchinson 0.01 sec.

Related; indirect; not bearing immediately upon an issue. The property pledged or given as a security interest, or a guarantee for payment of a debt, that will be taken or kept by the creditor in case of a default on the original debt.

That which is collateral is not of the essence. Collateral facts are facts that are not independently provable from, and that are not directly relevant to, issues in a Cause of Action. Collateral heirs are those individuals who are not directly related to the deceased through consanguinity. Similarly, collateral ancestors are uncles and aunts, as contrasted with direct ancestors, such as parents and grandparents.


collateral 1) n. property pledged to secure a loan or debt, usually funds or personal property as distinguished from real property (but technically collateral can include real estate). 2) adj. referring to something that is going on at the same time parallel to the main issue in a lawsuit or controversy which may affect the outcome of the case, such as adoption of a new federal regulation or a criminal trial of one of the parties.


collateral (Accompanying), adjective accessory, additional, affiliated, ancillary, appertaining, associated, auxiliary, belonging, closely related, concomitant, conjoined, connected, correlated, correspondent, corresponding, coupled with, entwined, interrelated, parallel, related, simultaneous, supplemental, supplementary
Associated concepts: collateral action, collateral agreement, collateral attack, collateral contract, collateral estoppel, collateral note, collateral powers, collateral proceeding, collattral promise, collateral source rule, collateral undertaking, collateral warranties
collateral (Immaterial), adjective being of no imporrance, extraneous, impertinent, inapplicable, inappropriate, incidental, inconsequential, indifferent, insignificant, irrelevant, meaningless, minor, negligible, nugatory, of little moment, peripheral, secondary, trivial, unconnected, unessential, unimportant
Associated concepts: collateral evidence, collateral facts, collateral fraud, collateral impeachment, collateral inquiry, collateral issue, collateral matter, collateral question, collateral testimony
Foreign phrases: Frustra probatur quod probatum non rellvat.It is useless to prove that which when proved is irrellvant.
See also: additional, akin, ancillary, bail, binder, circumstantial, coextensive, concurrent, consanguineous, correlative, deposit, extrinsic, germane, hostage, hypothecation, incident, pendent, peripheral, pledge, related, relative, relevant, secondary, security, similar, subordinate, supplementary

COLLATERAL, collateralis. From latus, a side; that which is sideways, and not direct.

HEIR, COLLATERAL. A collateral heir is one who is not of the direct line of the deceased, but comes from a collateral line; as, a brother, sister, an uncle and aunt, a nephew, niece, or cousin of the deceased.



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As Victor Turner long ago noted, such males in quasi-feminine statuses are associated with "spiritual characteristics, mutual interests and concerns, and collaterality .
In the anecdote reported above, collaterality or group-orientation (group-preference over individualism) was clearly the major value orientation of the sub-Saharan parents, while doing and achieving (of course as responsible individuals in society) was the major value orientation of the Canadians.
 
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