< English Contract Law 
      This is a glossary of legal terms used in this book.
| Acceptance | A non-conditional affirmation by an offeree that they are willing to contract in the terms of an offer. | 
|---|---|
| Bilateral | A contract where each of the parties have reciprocal obligations. | 
| Claimant | The party who brings a legal action (outside of the criminal context), who makes a claim. | 
| Common law | The original legal system in England, administered in medieval times by royally-appointed judges. | 
| Defendant | The party against whom a legal action is brought, who is called upon to defend themselves. | 
| Donation | Legal term for gift, whether of goods, services or legal rights. | 
| Donee | The party who receives under a donation. | 
| Donor | The party who gives under a donation. | 
| Equity | A legal system developed in late medieval England by the Lord Chancellor as a means of mitigating and correcting the rigidity of the original common law. | 
| Objective intention | Intention inferred by the reasonable onlooker from a person's conduct (or lack of). | 
| Offer | A statement made setting out terms by which an offeror is willing to be bound. | 
| Offeree | One who receives an offer. | 
| Offeror | One who makes an offer. | 
| Promisee | Party who benefits from a contractual obligation undertaken towards them by another, loosely person to whom a promise is made. | 
| Promisor | Party who undertakes a contractual obligation towards another, loosely person by whom a promise is made. | 
| Subjective intention | The psychological, internal motivation for a person's actions. | 
| Unilateral | A contract under which only one party has obligations. | 
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