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  1. Dictionary
    rescript
    /ˈriːskrɪpt/

    noun

    • 1. an official edict or announcement: "the tsar published a rescript which brought the government's reformist intentions into the public domain"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. 1. : a written answer of a Roman emperor or of a pope to a legal inquiry or petition. 2. : an official or authoritative order, decree, edict, or announcement. 3. : an act or instance of rewriting. Did you know? When Should You Use rescript?

  3. Rescript definition: a written answer, as of a Roman emperor or a pope, to a query or petition in writing.. See examples of RESCRIPT used in a sentence.

  4. noun. 1. an order or decree issued by a Roman emperor or by the pope in answer to some presented difficulty or point of law. 2. any official decree or order. 3. a. the act of rewriting. b. something rewritten; copy. Webster’s New World College Dictionary, 4th Edition. Copyright © 2010 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. All rights reserved. Word origin.

  5. a reply by a Pope to an inquiry concerning a point of law or morality. see more. noun. a legally binding command or decision entered on the court record (as if issued by a court or judge) synonyms: decree, edict, fiat, order. see more.

  6. 1. a written answer, as of a Roman emperor or a pope, to a query or petition in writing. 2. an official announcement; decree. 3. an act or instance of rewriting.

  7. How to use . rescript in a sentence Jellacic Imperial rescript repudiated was appointed representative of Austria in Hungary with command of all the forces. A History of the Nineteenth Century, Year by Year | Edwin Emerson

  8. rescript /ˈriːˌskrɪpt/ n. (in ancient Rome) an ordinance taking the form of a reply by the emperor to a question on a point of law. any official announcement or edict; a decree. something rewritten. the act or process of rewriting.