What does «innominado» mean in Spanish?
- Having no particular name; unnamed.
Examples of use in Spanish: "un insignificante e innominado riacho".
"un innominado paraje".
"me hacían mucho daño, se me clavaban dentro, haciéndome sentirme culpable de algo nuevo, cruel, innominado, que yo no había hecho", Mi vida a través de mi obra literaria, Jerónimo García Pérez (Jegarpe) - 2014.
- That it does not correspond to someone in particular.
Examples of use in Spanish: "es un pasaje en tren innominado, es decir, podrá ser usado por cualquiera".
"La primera opción establece la entrega mensual a cada senador de 12 tramos aéreos y 20 terrestres innominados, es decir que podrán ser cedidos a terceros".
- Each of the two bones, located one in each hip, which together with the sacrum and coccyx form the pelvis of mammals; in the adult animal it is constituted by the intimate union of three bony pieces; the ileum, the ischium and the pubis.
- (contrato innominado) That which, without adapting to those named in the law, is entered into by the parties using their freedom to agree.
Examples of use in Spanish: "la legislación permite a las partes convenir libremente en cualquier contrato innominado".
"El contrato es de dos maneras, nominado, e innominado; nominado es aquel que tiene nombre, por ejemplo, la compra, y venta; en tanto el innominado es aquel que no tiene nombre".
- (delito innominado) One who, without having a name in the laws (is not identifiable), offends or opposes in something to the natural, civil or civil law. In the past, excessive rigor, mistreatment of women by men or disobedience to magistrates were unnamed crimes. In most countries today there is no such thing as an unnamed crime because the principle of legality applies: there is no crime, and there is no punishment without a prior law indicating it. No one can be punished for an act that is not expressly foreseen as punishable by law, nor with penalties that the law has not previously established.