Books by "José María Martín de Eugenio"

8 books found

The Sounds of Spanish with Audio CD

The Sounds of Spanish with Audio CD

by José Ignacio Hualde

2005 · Cambridge University Press

Accompanying CD contains ... "[all] the sounds described in this book."--Page 4 of cover.

La resurrección de Fantomas

La resurrección de Fantomas

by José María Martín de Eugenio

1916

Los pantalones de mi mujer

Los pantalones de mi mujer

by Luis Linares Becerra, José María Martín de Eugenio

1913

Historia del teatro español

Historia del teatro español

by Narciso Díaz de Escovar, Francisco de Paula Lasso de la Vega, José Bernat y Durán

1924

Ni rey, ni Roque

Ni rey, ni Roque

by Manuel Merino García-Pierrat, José María Martín de Eugenio

1915

13?, o, El vencedor de Fantomas

13?, o, El vencedor de Fantomas

by José María Martín de Eugenio

1915

El espíritu emprendedor de los vascos

El espíritu emprendedor de los vascos

by Alfonso Otazu, José Ramón Díaz de Durana

2008 · Silex Ediciones

Este libro pretende documentar las causas, el desarrollo y las consecuencias del largo viaje que realizaron algunos vascos desde el pequeño país donde habían nacido, hasta asentarse, con gran éxito, en las ciudades mediterráneas, atlánticas o americanas que polarizaron el tráfico comercial durante esos siglos.

A Three-Dimensional Theory of Law

A Three-Dimensional Theory of Law

by María José Falcon y Tella

2010 · BRILL

What this book intends to do is to study three-dimensionalism (the distinction values-norms-facts) not in what could be called its historical dimension, but in its substantive aspect, as a “form” that, when applied to different legal themes, would add a “material content” to the three-dimensional theory. We can point out, as a study plan, the distinction between “three” perspectives: Those of the legal norm, of the legal order, and the legal relationship. Three-dimensionalism also appears in this work when one analyzes the “three” phases of the life of the law: The formation, the interpretation, and the application; and in the distinction between the “three” characteristics of the legal order: Fullness, coherence, and unity—the theory of legal validity, intended as legitimacy, as validity strictly speaking, or as effectiveness.