yasal, meşru: valid heir yasal mirasçı

listen to the pronunciation of yasal, meşru: valid heir yasal mirasçı
Türkçe - İngilizce
{s} valid
Well grounded or justifiable, pertinent

I will believe him as soon as he offers a valid answer.

Something that is valid is important or serious enough to make it worth saying or doing. Most designers share the unspoken belief that fashion is a valid form of visual art. + validity va·lid·ity the validity of making children wear cycle helmets
Justifiable, well grounded, sound; producing the desired results, efficacious; incontestable
In XML, the term used to describe a document that conforms to the rules of the associated schema Go to Validation for more information about valid documents
still legally acceptable; "the license is still valid"
(val-id) Valid means that an argument or reason is sound or well-founded
Having force or binding force legally sufficient and authorized by law; enforceable
Well grounded or justifiable Being logically correct
A company specializing in schematic capture tools
If a ticket or other document is valid, it can be used and will be accepted by people in authority. All tickets are valid for two months. see also validity
Strong; powerful; efficient
Describes XML documents that conform to a DTD
Having force or binding force; legally sufficient and authorized by law
an argument showing what we could believe but don't
A valid XML document, in addition to being well formed, conforms to all the constraints imposed by a DTD In other words, it does not contain any tags that are not permitted by the DTD, and the order of the tags conforms to the DTD's specifications
Legally binding; authorized
Having sufficient strength or force; founded in truth; capable of being justified, defended, or supported; not weak or defective; sound; good; efficacious; as, a valid argument; a valid objection
That which is legal and binding
Accurate, precise, reliable, authorized and relevant
"Valid" is an ambiguous adjective which is used in two related senses: Of arguments which are necessarily truth-preserving Of argument forms every instance of which are "valid" in sense 1 See "validating" Usually context, namely, whether the subject is an argument or argument form, makes it clear which of these meanings is intended However, sometimes this ambiguity is a boobytrap which leads to confusion For this reason, in the Fallacy Files, I use "valid" only in sense 1, and "validating" for sense 2