Definition
A legal principle or Latin term referring to suitability or fitness in law; what is convenient or appropriate under law (Latin legal term).
Etymology
From Latin 'conveniens,' meaning 'fitting' or 'suitable,' the present participle of 'convenire.' Used in Latin legal contexts and medieval English law to describe appropriate legal procedures.
Kelly Says
Medieval lawyers sprinkled Latin terms like 'conveniens' throughout their documents to add authority and precision—it was the professional jargon of its time, much like 'unprecedented circumstances' is today!
Translations
CACatalà
convenient
kon-ve-ni-ent
DADansk
velegtig
veh-leg-tig
DEDeutsch
geeignet
ge-eign-et
ELΕλληνικά
κατάλληλος
ka-tal-li-los
ESEspañol
conveniente
kon-ve-nee-en-te
FRFrançais
convenant
kon-ve-nan
HIहिन्दी
उपयुक्त
up-yook-ta
HUMagyar
megfelelő
meg-fe-le-lo
IDBahasa Indonesia
cocok
ko-kok
ITItaliano
conveniente
kon-ve-nee-en-te
MSBahasa Melayu
sesuai
se-su-ai
NLNederlands
geschikt
ge-schikt
NONorsk
passende
pas-sen-de
PLPolski
odpowiedni
od-po-vjed-ni
PTPortuguês
conveniente
kon-ve-nee-en-te
RORomână
potrivit
po-triv-it
RUРусский
подходящий
pod-kho-dyash-chiy
SVSvenska
passande
pas-san-de
SWKiswahili
faafaa
fa-a-fa-a
TAதமிழ்
குறைந்த
ku-rai-ntha
UKУкраїнська
відповідний
vid-po-vid-nyy
VITiếng Việt
phù hợp
foo-hop