Fungibles
Fungibles , noun, plural
[Late Latin (res) fungibiles, probably from Latin fungi to discharge. “A barbarous term, supposed to have originated in the use of the words functionem recipere in the Digeste.” Bouvier. “Called fungibiles, quia una alterius vice fungitur.” John Taylor (1755). Compare Function.]
1.
(Civ. Law) Things which may be furnished or restored in kind, as distinguished from specific things; -- called also fungible things.
A barbarous term, supposed to have originated in the use of the words functionem recipere in the Digeste.
Called fungibiles, quia una alterius vice fungitur.
2.
(Scots Law) Movable goods which may be valued by weight or measure, in contradistinction from those which must be judged of individually. — Jamieson