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Charter   /tʃˈɑrtər/   Listen
noun
Charter  n.  
1.
A written evidence in due form of things done or granted, contracts made, etc., between man and man; a deed, or conveyance. (Archaic)
2.
An instrument in writing, from the sovereign power of a state or country, executed in due form, bestowing rights, franchises, or privileges. "The king (John, a.d. 1215), with a facility somewhat suspicious, signed and sealed the charter which was required of him. This famous deed, commonly called the "Great Charter," either granted or secured very important liberties and privileges to every order of men in the kingdom."
3.
An act of a legislative body creating a municipal or other corporation and defining its powers and privileges. Also, an instrument in writing from the constituted authorities of an order or society (as the Freemasons), creating a lodge and defining its powers.
4.
A special privilege, immunity, or exemption. "My mother, Who has a charter to extol her blood, When she does praise me, grieves me."
5.
(Com.) The letting or hiring a vessel by special contract, or the contract or instrument whereby a vessel is hired or let; as, a ship is offered for sale or charter. See Charter party, below.
Charter land (O. Eng. Law), land held by charter, or in socage; bookland.
Charter member, one of the original members of a society or corporation, esp. one named in a charter, or taking part in the first proceedings under it.
Charter party (Com.), a mercantile lease of a vessel; a specific contract by which the owners of a vessel let the entire vessel, or some principal part of the vessel, to another person, to be used by the latter in transportation for his own account, either under their charge or his.
People's Charter (Eng. Hist.), the document which embodied the demands made by the Chartists, so called, upon the English government in 1838.



verb
Charter  v. t.  (past & past part. chartered; pres. part. chartering)  
1.
To establish by charter.
2.
To hire or let by charter, as a ship. See Charter party, under Charter, n.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Charter" Quotes from Famous Books



... mind, seem a sufficient answer to this. It is a fact known to all, that the members of the Supreme Court, together with the Governor, form a Council of Revision, and that this Council approved this Bank charter. I ask, then, if the extra-judicial decision not quite but almost made by the gentleman at Washington, before whom, by the way, the question of the constitutionality of our Bank never has, nor never can come—is to be taken as paramount to a decision ...
— The Papers And Writings Of Abraham Lincoln, Complete - Constitutional Edition • Abraham Lincoln

... the genesis of the Lecompton Constitution, and such the nursing it had received at the hands of the paternal government at Washington. In due course of time it was presented to Congress as the charter under which the people of Kansas asked to receive the concession of their right of State government; and the scene of war was forthwith transferred from those distant fields to the chambers of national legislation, under the immediate eye of the ...
— The Atlantic Monthly, Vol. II, No. 8, June 1858 • Various

... A charter of Henry's, dated 1430, ten years after the rediscovery of Madeira, and reciting the names of some of the first settlers, and his bequest of the island, or rather of its "spiritualties," to the Order of Christ on ...
— Prince Henry the Navigator, the Hero of Portugal and of Modern Discovery, 1394-1460 A.D. • C. Raymond Beazley

... martial law over his family, which compelled them to work for the preservation of it. When he had brought up his children, at the cost of those from whom his wife was able to extort gifts, the following charter and budget were the ...
— Sons of the Soil • Honore de Balzac

... already won, or to save the land from gross misgovernment. But always the forcible resistance, when successful, has been made not by revolutionaries but by the strong champions of constitutional government. The fruit of the resistance to John was the Great Charter; of Simon of Montfort's war against Henry III., the beginning of a representative Parliament; of the war against Charles, the establishment of Parliamentary government. Lilburne and his friends hoped that the civil war and ...
— The Rise of the Democracy • Joseph Clayton


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