- hereby
-
adverb
by means of, by the aid of, by virtue of, through, through the medium of, whereby
Burton's Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006
Burton's Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006
Hereby — Here*by , adv. 1. By means of this. [1913 Webster] And hereby we do know that we know him. 1 John ii. 3. [1913 Webster] 2. Close by; very near. [Obs.] Shak. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
hereby — hereby, herewith These two formal words are the strongest survivors of a group of words that also includes herein, hereof, hereto, heretofore, and hereunder, and even they are restricted to the contexts of legal and business correspondence or to… … Modern English usage
hereby — mid 13c., from HERE (Cf. here) + BY (Cf. by). Cf. Du. hierbij, Ger. hierbei … Etymology dictionary
hereby — ► ADVERB formal ▪ as a result of this … English terms dictionary
hereby — [hir bī′, hir′bī′] adv. 1. by or through this; by this means 2. obs. var. of HEREABOUT … English World dictionary
hereby — [[t]hɪ͟ə(r)ba͟ɪ[/t]] ADV: ADV before v You use hereby when officially or formally saying what you are doing. [FORMAL] I hereby sentence you for life after all the charges against you have been proven true... You are hereby appointed Sub… … English dictionary
hereby — /hear buy , hear buy /, adv. 1. by this, or the present, declaration, action, document, etc.; by means of this; as a result of this: I hereby resign as president of the class. 2. Obs. nearby. [1200 50; ME. See HERE, BY] * * * … Universalium
hereby — adverb /hɪrˈbaɪ/ By this means, action or process. I hereby declare you husband and wife … Wiktionary
hereby — adv. Hereby is used with these verbs: ↑acknowledge, ↑declare, ↑grant, ↑proclaim, ↑sentence … Collocations dictionary
hereby — here|by [ˌhıəˈbaı, ˈhıəbaı US ˌhır ,ˈhır ] adv law as a result of this statement used in official situations ▪ I hereby agree to the conditions of this contract … Dictionary of contemporary English