Contrahent

/ˈkɒntrəhɛnt/ noun

Definition

A person who enters into a contract; a party to a contract or agreement.

Etymology

From Latin 'contrahens,' present participle of 'contrahere' (to draw together, enter into). The term came into English legal vocabulary to denote someone binding themselves by contract.

Kelly Says

Medieval law got fancy with 'contrahent'—it distinguished a person actively making a contract from other parties, giving contracts an almost theatrical quality with different 'players.'

Related Words

Explore More Words

Get the Word Orb API

Complete word intelligence in one call. Free tier — 50 lookups/day.