English edit

Etymology edit

Borrowed from Late Latin redhibitōrius, from redhibeō.

Adjective edit

redhibitory (not comparable)

  1. (law) Of or pertaining to redhibition (the annulling of a sale).
    a redhibitory action or fault
    • 1998, “Watkins v. Freeway Motors - A need to clarify the principle of novation”, in Louisiana Law Review:
      rescinding both contracts because the cars had redhibitory defects
  2. (non-native speakers' English) Prohibitive (cf. French rédhibitoire).
    • 2009, Luc Hessel, “From clinical research to vaccination policy: 25years experience in vaccinology”, in Human Vaccines, →DOI:
      My wish was to become a professional seaman, but my skills in mathematics were poor and I was wearing glasses, two redhibitory defects at a time when GPS and computers did not exist. Luckily sailing remains my lifelong hobby.

Derived terms edit

References edit