Entry 音标拼音: ['ɛntri]
n . 登录,条目,进入,入口,报关手续
登录,条目,进入,入口,报关手续
entry 块输入
entry 进口; 入口; 登录
ENT
entry 资料子登记项
entry 再(重)入
entry 入口 分录 项 登录
entry n 1 :
an item inserted in a written record 2 :
the act of beginning something new ; "
they looked forward to the debut of their new product line " [
synonym : {
introduction },
{
debut }, {
first appearance }, {
launching }, {
unveiling },
{
entry }]
3 :
a written record of a commercial transaction [
synonym : {
entry },
{
accounting entry }, {
ledger entry }]
4 :
something (
manuscripts or architectural plans and models or estimates or works of art of all genres etc .)
submitted for the judgment of others (
as in a competition ); "
several of his submissions were rejected by publishers "; "
what was the date of submission of your proposal ?" [
synonym : {
submission }, {
entry }]
5 :
something that provides access (
to get in or get out ); "
they waited at the entrance to the garden "; "
beggars waited just outside the entryway to the cathedral " [
synonym : {
entrance },
{
entranceway }, {
entryway }, {
entry }, {
entree }]
6 :
the act of entering ; "
she made a grand entrance " [
synonym :
{
entrance }, {
entering }, {
entry }, {
ingress }, {
incoming }]
Entry \
En "
try \,
n .;
pl . {
Entries }. [
OE .
entree ,
entre ,
F .
entr ['
e ]
e ,
fr .
entrer to enter .
See {
Enter },
and cf .
{
Entr ['
e ]
e }.]
1 .
The act of entering or passing into or upon ;
entrance ;
ingress ;
hence ,
beginnings or first attempts ;
as ,
the entry of a person into a house or city ;
the entry of a river into the sea ;
the entry of air into the blood ;
an entry upon an undertaking .
[
1913 Webster ]
2 .
The act of making or entering a record ;
a setting down in writing the particulars ,
as of a transaction ;
as ,
an entry of a sale ;
also ,
that which is entered ;
an item .
[
1913 Webster ]
A notary made an entry of this act . --
Bacon .
[
1913 Webster ]
3 .
That by which entrance is made ;
a passage leading into a house or other building ,
or to a room ;
a vestibule ;
an adit ,
as of a mine .
[
1913 Webster ]
A straight ,
long entry to the temple led . --
Dryden .
[
1913 Webster ]
4 . (
Com .)
The exhibition or depositing of a ship '
s papers at the customhouse ,
to procure license to land goods ;
or the giving an account of a ship '
s cargo to the officer of the customs ,
and obtaining his permission to land the goods .
See {
Enter },
v .
t .,
8 ,
and {
Entrance },
n .,
5 .
[
1913 Webster ]
5 . (
Law )
(
a )
The actual taking possession of lands or tenements ,
by entering or setting foot on them .
(
b )
A putting upon record in proper form and order .
(
c )
The act in addition to breaking essential to constitute the offense or burglary . --
Burrill .
[
1913 Webster ]
{
Bill of entry }.
See under {
Bill }.
{
Double entry }, {
Single entry }.
See {
Bookkeeping }.
{
Entry clerk } (
Com .),
a clerk who makes the original entries of transactions in a business .
{
Writ of entry } (
Law ),
a writ issued for the purpose of obtaining possession of land from one who has unlawfully entered and continues in possession . --
Bouvier .
[
1913 Webster ]
132 Moby Thesaurus words for "
entry ":
access ,
account ,
adit ,
admission ,
admittance ,
adversaria ,
adversary ,
aide -
memoire ,
air lock ,
annotation ,
approach ,
arrival ,
booking ,
candidate ,
cataloging ,
chronicling ,
coming in ,
competitor ,
contestant ,
corridor ,
credit ,
debit ,
docket ,
door ,
doorway ,
double entry ,
enlistment ,
enrollment ,
entering ,
entrance ,
entrance hall ,
entranceway ,
entrant ,
entree ,
entryway ,
favorite ,
footnote ,
foyer ,
galilee ,
gangplank ,
gangway ,
hall ,
impanelment ,
import ,
importation ,
importing ,
in ,
income ,
incoming ,
indexing ,
infiltration ,
ingoing ,
ingress ,
ingression ,
inlet ,
input ,
inscribing ,
inscription ,
insertion ,
insinuation ,
intake ,
interpenetration ,
introduction ,
introgression ,
intrusion ,
inventorying ,
item ,
jotting ,
leakage ,
listing ,
lobby ,
logging ,
marginal note ,
marginalia ,
matriculation ,
means of access ,
memo ,
memoir ,
memorandum ,
memorial ,
minute ,
minutes ,
mudder ,
narthex ,
notation ,
note ,
open arms ,
open door ,
opening ,
opponent ,
participant ,
passage ,
passageway ,
penetration ,
percolation ,
plate horse ,
plater ,
player ,
pole horse ,
pony ,
portal ,
portico ,
posting ,
propylaeum ,
race horse ,
racer ,
reception ,
record ,
record keeping ,
recordation ,
recording ,
register ,
registration ,
registry ,
reminder ,
rival ,
scholia ,
scholium ,
seepage ,
single entry ,
stable ,
stake horse ,
staker ,
starter ,
steeplechaser ,
stoa ,
string ,
tabulation ,
threshold ,
vestibule ,
way ,
way in ENTRY .
criminal law .
The unlawful breaking into a house ,
in order to commit a crime .
In cases of burglary ,
the least entry with the whole or any part of the body ,
hand ,
or foot ,
or with any instrument or weapon ,
introduced for the purpose of committing a felony ,
is sufficient to complete the offence .
3 Inst .
64 .
ENTRY ,
estates ,
rights .
The taking possession of lands by the legal owner .
2 .
A person having a right of possession may assert it by a peaceable entry ,
and being in possession may retain it ,
and plead that it is his soil and freehold ;
and this will not break in upon any rule of law respecting the mode of obtaining the possession of lands .
3 Term Rep .
B .
R .
295 .
When another person has taken possession of lands or tenements ,
and the owner peaceably makes an entry thereon ,
and declares that be thereby takes possession of the same ,
he shall ,
by this notorious act of ownership ,
which is equal to a feodal investiture ,
be restored to his original right .
3 Bl .
Com .
174 .
3 .
A right of entry is not assignable at common law .
Co .
Litt .
214 a .
As to the law on this subject in the United States ,
vide Buying of titles ;
4 Kent ,
Com .
439 2 Hill .
Ab .
c .
33 ,
Sec .
42 to 52 ;
also ,
article ReEntry ;
Bac .
Ab .
Descent ,
G ;
8 Vin .
Ab .
441 .
4 .
In another sense ,
entry signifies the going upon another man '
s lands or his tenements .
An entry in this sense may be justifiably made on another '
s land or house ,
first ,
when the law confers an authority ;
and secondly ,
when the party has authority in fact .
5 .
First ,
1 .
An officer may enter the close of one against whose person or property he is charged with the execution of a writ .
In a civil case ,
the officer cannot open (
even by unlatching )
the outer inlet to a house ,
as a door or window opening into the street 18 Edw .
IV .,
Easter ,
19 ,
pl .
4 ;
Moore ,
pl .
917 ,
p .
668 Cooke '
s case ,
Wm .
Jones ,
429 ;
although it has been closed for the purpose of excluding him .
Cowp .
1 .
But in a criminal case ,
a constable may break open an outer door to arrest one within suspected of felony .
13 Edw .
IV .,
Easter ,
4 ,
p .
9 .
If the outer door or window be open ,
he may enter through it to execute a civil writ ;
Palin .
52 ;
5 Rep .
91 ;
and ,
having entered ,
he may ,
in every case ,
if necessary ,
break open an inner door .
1 Brownl .
50 .
6 .-
2 .
The lord may enter to distrain ,
and go into the house for that purpose ,
the outer door being open .
5 Rep .
91 .
7 .-
3 .
The proprietors of goods or chattels may enter the land of another upon which they are placed ,
and remove them ,
provided they are there without his default ;
as where his tree has blown down into the adjoining close by the wind ,
or his fruit has fallen from a branch which overhung it .
20 Vin .
Abr .
418 .
8 .-
4 .
If one man is bound to repair bridge ,
he has a right of entry given him by law for that purpose .
Moore ,
889 .
9 .-
5 .
A creditor has a right to enter the close of his debtor to demand the duty owing ,
though it is not to be rendered there .
Cro .
Eliz .
876 .
10 .-
6 .
If trees are excepted out of a demise ,
the lessor has the right of entering ,
to prune or fell them .
Cro .
Eliz .
17 ;
11 .
Rep .
53 .
11 .-
7 .
Every traveller has ,
by law ,
the privilege of entering a common inn ,
at all seasonable times ,
provided the host has sufficient accommodation ,
which ,
if he has not ,
it is for him to declare .
12 .-
8 .
Ever man may throw down a public nuisance ,
and a private one may be thrown down by the party grieved ,
and this before an prejudice happens ,
but only from the probability that it may happen .
5 Rep ,
102 and see 1 Brownl .
212 ;
12 Mod .
510 Wm .
Jones ,
221 ;
1 Str .
683 .
To this end ,
the abator has authority to enter the close in which it stands .
See Nuisance .
13 .-
9 .
An entry may be made on the land of another ,
to exercise or enjoy therein an incorporeal right or hereditament to which he is entitled .
Hamm .
N .
P .
172 .
See general Bouv .
Inst .
Index ,
h .
t .;
2 Greenl .
Ev .
Sec .
627 ;
License .
ENTRY ,
commercial law .
The act of setting down the particulars of a sale ,
or other transaction ,
in a merchant '
s or tradesman '
s account books ;
such entries are ,
in general ,
prima facie evidence of the sale and delivery ,
and of work ,
done ;
but unless the entry be the original one ,
it is not evidence .
Vide Original entry .
ENTRY ,
WRIT OF .
The name of a writ issued for the purpose of obtaining possession of land from one who has entered unlawfully ,
and continues in possession .
This is a mere possessor action ,
and does not decide the right of property .
2 .
The writs of entry were commonly brought ,
where the tenant or possessor of the land entered lawfully ;
that is ,
without fraud or force ;
13 Edw .
I .
c .
25 ;
although sometimes they were founded upon an entry made by wrong .
The forms of these writs are very various ,
and are adapted to the ,
title and estate of the demandant .
Booth enumerates and particularly discusses twelve varieties .
Real Actions ,
pp .
175 -
200 .
In general they contain an averment of the manner in which the defendant entered .
At the common law these actions could be brought only in the degrees ,
but the Statute of Marlbridge ,
c .
30 ;
Rob .
Dig .
147 ,
cited as c .
29 ;
gave a writ adapted to cases beyond the degrees ,
called a writ of entry in the post .
Booth ,
172 ,
173 .
The denomination of these writs by degrees ,
is derived from the circumstance that estates are supposed by the law to pass by degrees from one person to another ,
either by descent or purchase .
Similar to this idea ,
or rather corresponding with it ,
are the gradations of consanguinity ,
indicated by the very common term pedigree .
But in reference to the writs of entry ,
the degrees recognized were only two ,
and the writs were quaintly termed writs in the per ,
and writs in the per and cui .
Examples of these writs are given in Booth on R .
A .
pp .
173 ,
174 .
The writ in the ,
per runs thus : "
Command A ,
that be render unto B ,
one messuage , &
c .,
into which he has not entry except (
per )
by &
c .
The writ in the per and cui contains another gradation in the transmission of the estate ,
and read thus :
Command A ,
that he render , &
c .,
one messuage ,
into which he hath not entry but (
per )
by C , (
cui )
to whom the aforesaid B demised it for a term of years ,
now expired ," &
c .
2 Institute ,
153 ;
Co .
Litt .
b ,
239 ,
a .
Booth ,
however ,
makes three degrees ,
by accounting the estate in the per ,
the second degree .
The difference is not substantial .
If the estate had passed further ,
either by descent or conveyance ,
it was said to be out of the degrees ,
and to such cases the writ of entry on the .
statute of Marlbridge ,
only ,
was applicable .
3 Bl .
Com .
181 ,
182 ;
Report of Com .
to Revise Civil Code of Penna .
January 15 ,
1835 ,
p .
85 .
Vide Writ of entry .
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