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Collection last updated: Nov 23 2024
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Finnegans Wake lines: 36
Elucidations found: 161

574.01the wood industries in our courts of litigation. D'Oyly Owens
574.01+(William Wood: 18th century English ironmonger who was granted a short-lived right to mint copper coinage for Ireland; Cluster: William) [.13] [.29]
574.01+VI.B.13.037c (g): 'D'Oyley' (Cluster: Doyle)
574.01+VI.B.13.031g (g): 'Doyle Owens' ('wens' uncertain; Cluster: Doyle)
574.01+Richard D'Oyly Carte: 19th century English theatrical producer, who brought Gilbert and Sullivan together and founded the D'Oyly Carte Opera Company to stage their works (Cluster: Doyle) [573.14]
574.01+Joyce: Ulysses.16.363: 'Jesus, Mr Doyle' (the Anointed is a title of Jesus, referring to his having, as a perceived Messiah, been anointed with oil, hence jokingly Doyle; Cluster: Doyle)
574.01+Irish Dáil Éireann: Assembly of Ireland, the lower chamber of the post-independence Irish parliament (pronounced 'doyl airen'; Cluster: Doyle)
574.02holds (though Finn Magnusson of himself holds also) that so
574.02+VI.B.42.027h (r): 'Finn Magnusson'
574.02+Yonge: History of Christian Names 244: (in a section about the Gaelic name Finn) 'Finn Magnusson was one of the chief authorities for Scandinavian antiquities'
574.02+Finnur Magnússon: 19th century Icelandic historian and antiquarian, who published in Danish under the name Finn Magnussen (Cluster: Historians)
574.02+(by himself; regarding himself)
574.03long as there is a joint deposit account in the two names a
574.03+VI.B.13.018b (g): 'joint deposit'
574.03+joint deposit account: a bank account fully shared by two people (e.g. a married couple, or business partners)
574.04mutual obligation is posited. Owens cites Brerfuchs and Warren,
574.04+posited: assumed to exist
574.04+Brerfuchs and Warren (*E* and *A*) [.16] [.36] [575.02] [575.11] [575.29] [576..07]
574.04+Brer Fox and Brer Rabbit: characters in Joel Chandler Harris's Uncle Remus books
574.04+(Remus was one of the legendary founders of Rome) [.05]
574.04+German Fuchs: fox
574.04+warren: a network of interconnecting rabbit burrows
574.05a foreign firm, since disseized, registered as Tangos, Limited,
574.05+VI.B.40.086a (o): 'since disseized 140' ('since' is interpolated into the entry)
574.05+Legalese disseized: wrongfully dispossessed, deprived of possessions by force
574.05+deceased
574.05+Latin tango: I touch (and numerous other derived meanings; Cluster: Tango-Tetigi-Pango-Pepigi)
574.05+(Roman Catholic Church) [.04] [.28]
574.06for the sale of certain proprietary articles. The action which was
574.06+Legalese proprietary articles: things made and sold by a person or company having an exclusive right to do so
574.06+articles: core statements of religious faith [.27]
574.06+Legalese action: legal proceedings, lawsuit
574.07at the instance of the trustee of the heathen church emergency
574.07+phrase at the instance of: instigated by
574.07+VI.B.13.039l (g): 'trustee' (Cluster: Trustee)
574.07+Legalese trustee: a person responsible for the administration of a fund for the benefit of others (Cluster: Trustee)
574.07+Variants: {FnF, Vkg, Png: ...heathen church emergency...} | {JJA 60:291: ...Heathen Church Emergency...} (conceivably corrupted at JJA 60:350)
574.07+HCE (Motif: HCE)
574.07+(heathen emerging from a church; religion emerging in a heathen)
574.07+emergency: urgent state of affairs (Obsolete appearance, emergence)
574.08fund, suing by its trustee, a resigned civil servant, for the pay-
574.08+f + (Motif: 5 vowels) + nd: U [.08] [.12] [.22], O [575.28], I [575.33], OU [575.02] [575.34], E [575.35] (A missing)
574.08+Legalese fund: a pool of money dedicated for a specific purpose (e.g. an emergency), as well as the organisation managing it
574.08+Cluster: Trustee
574.09ment of tithes due was heard by Judge Doyle and also by a com-
574.09+tithes: portions of one's income pledged to one's church
574.09+Cluster: Doyle
574.09+Legalese common jury: trial jury, a jury that returns a verdict in a regular trial (as opposed to a special or grand jury)
574.10mon jury. No question arose as to the debt for which vouchers
574.10+VI.B.13.023e (g): 'debt not paid'
574.10+VI.B.13.038i (g): 'voucher'
574.10+Legalese voucher: a document serving to vouch for the correctness of monetary transactions [.16]
574.11spoke volumes. The defence alleged that payment had been made
574.11+phrase speak volumes: to convey significant information
574.11+(volumes of vouchers)
574.12effective. The fund trustee, one Jucundus Fecundus Xero Pecun-
574.12+Spanish efectivo: effective, actual, real; cash
574.12+Cluster: Trustee
574.12+VI.B.13.163d (g): 'J F X P Jucundus Fecundus Xero Pecundus'
574.12+Archdeacon J.F.X.P. Coppinger [.22] [575.06] [575.24]
574.12+Latin jucundus: pleasant, agreeable
574.12+Latin fecundus: fruitful, prolific
574.12+Latin pecuniosus: rich, wealthy
574.13dus Coppercheap, counterclaimed that payment was invalid
574.13+(William Wood's coinage scheme threatened to overrun the Irish economy with cheap copper coins) [.01]
574.14having been tendered to creditor under cover of a crossed cheque,
574.14+Legalese tendered: offered in discharge of a debt
574.14+Legalese creditor: one to whom a debt is owing
574.14+phrase under cover of: disguised as, pretending to be
574.14+Legalese cover: a sum of money adequate to meet a liability
574.14+VI.B.13.022f (g): 'crossed cheque'
574.14+Legalese crossed cheque: a cheque drawn across with two transverse lines, thus making it payable only through certain banking channels (often specified by name between the two lines) [.18] [575.09]
574.14+(Motif: Sign of the cross)
574.15signed in the ordinary course, in the name of Wieldhelm, Hurls
574.15+Legalese phrase in the ordinary course: according to accepted business practice
574.15+VI.B.13.039e (g): 'course'
574.15+VI.B.13.032a (g): 'Wieldhelm'
574.15+Wilhelm: German male given name, cognate of William (Cluster: William)
574.15+wields helm, hurls cross (i.e. pagan ship's captain, Viking)
574.15+VI.B.13.036f (g): 'hurls † hurdles cross'
574.15+Harold's Cross: district of Dublin
574.16Cross, voucher copy provided, and drawn by the senior partner
574.16+VI.C.5.061b (o): 'voncher copy' ('n' presumably a mistranscribed 'u')
574.16+Legalese voucher copy: a duplicate (e.g. a carbon copy) of a monetary transaction document (e.g. a cheque), serving to vouch for the original [.10]
574.16+Legalese drawn: (of a cheque) written out
574.16+(because only one partner had signed the cheque, the bank refused payment) [.16-.20]
574.16+senior partner (of a firm, i.e. William Brerfuchs; *E*) [.04] [575.02]
574.17only by whom the lodgment of the species had been effected but
574.17+Legalese lodgment: the act of depositing (money, etc.)
574.17+phrase the species: the human race (hence, lodging of people, as offered by an innkeeper)
574.17+Legalese specie: money (especially coined money with an intrinsic precious metal value; 'species' is an Obsolete spelling)
574.17+effected: brought about, implemented
574.18in their joint names. The bank particularised, the national misery
574.18+particularised: specifically named (on the crossed cheque) [.14]
574.18+part (Motif: meet/part) [.21]
574.18+The National Bank Limited: a British bank founded in the 19th century (from 1835 to 1859 called The National Bank of Ireland)
574.18+Variants: {FnF, Vkg, Png: ...national misery...} | {JJA 60:291: ...National Misery...} (conceivably corrupted at JJA 60:351)
574.18+misery: great unhappiness, extreme poverty (Obsolete miserliness, stinginess)
574.18+treasury
574.19(now almost entirely in the hands of the four chief bondholders
574.19+(*X*)
574.19+Legalese phrase bondholder for value: a person who holds bonds of some company obtained in exchange for something of value
574.19+VI.B.13.038g (g): 'holder for value'
574.20for value in Tangos), declined to pay the draft, though there
574.20+Cluster: Tango-Tetigi-Pango-Pepigi
574.20+tango... dud... thirtynine [.20] [.26-.27] [534.11]
574.20+draft: cheque
574.21were ample reserves to meet the liability, whereupon the trusty
574.21+reserves: capital kept on hand by a bank in order to meet regular demand
574.21+Legalese phrase meet a liability: be able to discharge a financial obligation (e.g. cash a cheque)
574.21+meet [.18]
574.21+VI.B.9.123f (g): 'a trusty'
574.21+trusty: a trustworthy person, especially a prisoner granted special privileges
574.21+Cluster: Trustee
574.22Coppercheap negociated it for and on behalf of the fund of the
574.22+Archdeacon J.F.X.P. Coppinger [.12] [575.06] [575.24]
574.22+Legalese negotiate: to obtain the monetary value of (e.g. a cheque; 'negociate' is an Obsolete spelling)
574.22+VI.B.13.024g (g): 'for & on behalf on'
574.22+Legalese phrase for and on behalf of: acting as an official agent of
574.22+phrase for the fun of the thing: solely for amusement or entertainment
574.23thing to a client of his, a notary, from whom, on consideration, he
574.23+VI.B.13.039f (g): 'notary'
574.23+Legalese notary: a legal practitioner who prepares and certifies legal documents, such as contracts and affidavits (fully, notary public)
574.23+VI.B.13.039k (g): 'on consideration'
574.23+Legalese phrase on consideration: as compensation or remuneration, in return for something of value received
574.23+phrase on consideration: after careful thought, upon reflection
574.24received in exchange legal relief as between trusthee and bethrust,
574.24+Legalese legal relief: compensation, reparation, redress (usually court-ordered)
574.24+relief, thrust (sexual innuendo)
574.24+VI.B.13.039b (g): 'as between'
574.24+Cluster: Trustee
574.24+Obsolete betrust: a trust
574.25with thanks. Since then the cheque, a good washable pink, em-
574.25+phrase good washable pink (used in advertisements, referring to the colour of girls' clothes and underclothes) [575.15]
574.25+cheque washing: the process of erasing details from a cheque to allow them to be rewritten (for criminal purposes) [575.15]
574.25+(pink was a not uncommon colour for the paper cheques were printed on in Joyce's time) [575.16]
574.26bossed D you D No 11 hundred and thirty 2, good for the figure
574.26+Legalese phrase do ut des: a commutative contract in which an equality between the giving and the receiving is emphasised (literally 'I give so that you may give'; also applied by the Romans to a contractual view of the relationship between man and god, e.g. via religious sacrifices)
574.26+dud: counterfeit cheque
574.26+VI.B.13.024e (g): 'no 3632' (a line joins this entry to entry 024a) [575.17]
574.26+No.: abbreviation for number
574.26+Motif: 1132
574.26+good for one's figure and face (e.g. a walk in the fresh air)
574.26+figure: amount of money expressed in numerical digits (e.g. on a cheque)
574.27and face, had been circulating in the country for over thirtynine
574.27+face: the side of a cheque on which the transaction details are written
574.27+VI.B.13.040j (g): '39' (Motif: 39) [573.20]
574.27+The Thirty-Nine Articles: the defining doctrines of the Church of England (Motif: 39) [.06] [.28]
574.28years among holders of Pango stock, a rival concern, though not
574.28+Latin pango: I fasten (and numerous other derived meanings; Cluster: Tango-Tetigi-Pango-Pepigi)
574.28+(Anglican Church) [.05] [.27]
574.28+concern: company, firm
574.29one demonetised farthing had ever spun or fluctuated across the
574.29+demonetised: withdrawn from circulation as currency, deprived of monetary value
574.29+Colloquial damn (an intensifier)
574.29+monetised: put into circulation as currency, minted
574.29+(William Wood's copper coinage consisted of halfpence and farthing coins) [.01]
574.29+spin, fluctuate (literally, as a coin would; figuratively, as a stock market would)
574.30counter in the semblance of hard coin or liquid cash. The jury (a
574.30+counter: a banker's table or board (on which money is counted)
574.30+phrase in the semblance of: in the form of, so as to resemble
574.30+VI.B.13.038k-l (g): 'solid bullion or hard cash' [575.11]
574.30+hard: (of money) in coin, rather than in paper
574.30+liquid: (of assets) easily converted into cash
574.31sour dozen of stout fellows all of whom were curiously named
574.31+VI.A.0641cq (g): 'Saorstat (sour stout)'
574.31+Irish Saorstát Éireann: Irish Free State (Ireland's official name from 1922 to 1937)
574.31+sour stout: a variant of stout (beer)
574.31+sour: (of people) ill-tempered
574.31+VI.B.13.012c (g): '*O* 12 doyles' (Cluster: Doyle)
574.31+phrase dozen of stout: a pack of twelve bottles of stout
574.31+Archaic phrase stout fellow: brave man
574.31+stout: (of people) thick in body, fat
574.32after doyles) naturally disagreed jointly and severally, and the
574.32+VI.B.13.037b (g): 'after Doyles' (Cluster: Doyle)
574.32+Variants: {FnF, Vkg, Png: ...doyles...} | {JJA 60:291: ...Doyles...} (conceivably corrupted at JJA 60:351)
574.32+VI.B.13.039m (g): 'jointly but severally'
574.32+Legalese jointly and severally: (of members of a group) both together and individually (opposites)
574.33belligerent judge, disagreeing with the allied jurors' disagree-
574.33+belligerent: hostile, aggressive, uncooperative; a nation participating in a war (e.g. World War I) [.35]
574.33+Allied jurists: legal experts of the Allied nations in World War I (a common phrase in newspapers of the period, especially during the war crime trials of the early 1920s)
574.34ment, went outside his jurisfiction altogether and ordered a gar-
574.34+jurisdiction
574.34+fiction
574.34+VI.B.13.038h (g): 'garnishee'
574.34+Legalese garnishee attachment: a court order setting aside or seizing (attaching) money or property belonging to a third party, the garnishee, for the purpose of paying a debt owed by the debtor (defendant) to the creditor (plaintiff)
574.35nishee attachment to the neutral firm. No mandamus could lo-
574.35+neutral: not belonging to either side in a multinational war (e.g. World War I) [.33]
574.35+Legalese mandamus: a court order directing an entity (e.g. government, company, officer) to perform some duty (e.g. locate someone; from Latin mandamus: we command)
574.36cate the depleted whilom Breyfawkes as he had entered into an
574.36+Legalese depleted: (of funds) expended, spent
574.36+(missing)
574.36+Variants: {FnF, Vkg, Png: ...whilom...} | {JJA 60:291: ...Whilom...} (conceivably corrupted at JJA 60:351)
574.36+Archaic whilom: former (Obsolete deceased)
574.36+Cluster: William
574.36+Brerfuchs [.04]
574.36+Guy Fawkes


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