the notery and witness by
Sworn to and subscribed in my presence by' is typical language for legal documents such as oaths. It is a statement of the witness, and the person whose name follows 'by' is the person making the oath or signing the document.
"Subscribed and sworn before me..."
subscribed and sworn
sworn and subscribed to me this day _____ of ___ year by_______. by what?
He is called the blank-elect where blank is the name of the position to which he has just been elected. Examples: president-elect, congressman-elect, etc.
Typically, you will see the following "footer" at the bottom of a document that calls for notarization: Subscribed and sworn to before me this _____ day of _________, 20 __ __________________________ Notary Public = = Item Number: XXXXXXXX
I don't quite understand your question, but if you are talking about a jurat, i.e. a certification by a notary public or other official that an oath was administered and a document was signed in the official's presence, the proper verbage is:STATE OF ______________COUNTY OF _________________Sworn to and subscribed before me this ______ day of ______________, 20____, by ___(name of person signing document/swearing)_____, who ( ) is personally known to me, or ( ) has produced ____________________ as identification.(SIGNED) ________________________NOTARY PUBLIC(or other official authorized to administer oath)
I/you/we/they have sworn. He/she/it has sworn.
A sworn declaration is a legal statement made under oath, typically in the presence of a notary public or other authorized official. An unsworn declaration is a statement made without taking an oath or affirmation, but still carries legal weight in certain circumstances.
No The way to tell a noun is if it can be preceded by an article (the, a, an). You cannot say 'the sworn' or 'a sworn' by itself. The statement could be 'sworn to secrecy' in which case the whole phrase seems adjectival. Sworn itself is the imperfect tense of 'to swear'.
he was sworn in the year 2009
Sworn Amongst was created in 2002.