Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Posthumous publication refers to publishing of creative work after the creator's death. This can be because the creator died during the publishing process or before the work was completed . It can also be because the creator chose to delay publication until after their death.
Douglas Adams* — The Salmon of Doubt (essays, as well as an incomplete novel) Albert Camus* — nine publications of notebooks and collected essays; Heinz Cassirer — God's New Covenant: A New Testament Translation; Geoffrey Chaucer* — A Treatise on the Astrolabe; Carl von Clausewitz — On War
Zudora (1914–1915), a 20-part serial whose first installment was released just over three months after producer Charles J. Hite's death in an automobile accident; Hite was on the way to his home in New Rochelle, New York, and was crossing the viaduct at 155th Street in Manhattan when his vehicle skidded off the roadway and onto the sidewalk, tore through an iron railing and plunged fifty ...
The circumstances of each posthumous release are different, and while rare, some success stories do cut through. In hip-hop, where mixtapes are often released non-commercially, a common practice ...
Black's Law Dictionary defines the rule against perpetuities as "[t]he common-law rule prohibiting a grant of an estate unless the interest must vest, if at all, no later than 21 years (plus a period of gestation to cover a posthumous birth) after the death of some person alive when the interest was created." [8]
The Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles sent a letter on Thursday to George Floyd’s lawyer rejecting her application for a posthumous pardon for a 2004 drug offense. “The members of the Texas ...
Posthumous may refer to: Posthumous award – an award, prize or medal granted after the recipient's death; Posthumous publication – publishing of creative work ...
Archaic vocabulary: legal writing employs many old words and phrases that were formerly quotidian language, but today exist mostly or only in law, dating from the 16th century; English examples are herein, hereto, hereby, heretofore, herewith, whereby, and wherefore (pronominal adverbs); said and such (as adjectives). [5]