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  • ...ational news, company and industry information, state and county profiles, state and national legal information, and biographical data. ...sources, U.S. Federal and state case law, codes, regulations, legal news, law reviews, and international legal information.
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  • ...edu/views/BOOK_SEARCH.html?book=t122 '''''The Oxford Companion to American Law'''''] ...e of state and local law and legal institutions, and the place of American law in a comparative international perspective. Nearly 500 entries are included
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  • ...ut the statutes, but less so to criticize the law itself. Some use natural law synonymously with natural [[justice]] or natural right (Latin ius naturale) ...evelopment of [[English]] [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Common_law common law],[3] and have featured greatly in the philosophies of [[Thomas Aquinas]], F
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  • Collection of environmental news and commentary. Includes federal and state codes, regulations, hazardous materials informtion, and legal actions. Also ...e case law and agency decisions. 4) Waste & Materials - Locate federal and state waste site data and hazardous materials information.
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  • *1: to go or [[act]] contrary to : [[violate]] <contravene a [[law]]> ...misdemeanor] in common law countries. The term is also used in Australian law. The act of contravening can be: opposition; obstruction; transgression; vi
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  • ...d constitutional [[doctrine]] when invoked to block enforcement of federal law. ...e state that the federal law may not be enforced in the state. Rather, the law would still be enforced. Thus, interposition may be seen as more [[moderate
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  • '''Martial law''' is the system of rules that takes effect when the [[military]] takes con ...asters; however most countries use a different legal construct, such as a "state of emergency".
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  • # law - The state of someone’s [[mind]] at the time of committing an [[offence]]. The state of someone’s mind at the time of committing an offence}}
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  • 3 : to contest at [[law]] <litigate a claim> A lawsuit is a civil [[action]] brought before a [[court]] of [[law]] in which a plaintiff, a party who claims to have received damages from a
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  • *1 : to [[institute]] (as a [[law]]) permanently by enactment or [[agreement]] *6 : to make (a church) a national or state institution
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  • ...t]] or [[process]] of convicting of a crime especially in a [[court]] of [[law]] :b : the [[state]] of being convinced of error or compelled to admit the truth
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  • ...uthority]] by [[virtue]] of their promulgation by an official organ of a [[state]] or other [[organization]] ...edia.org/wiki/Case_law case law].) Before an item of legislation becomes [[law]] it may be known as a [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bill_(proposed_law) b
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  • ...e foreign [[relations]] of a [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vassal vassal] state but allowing it [[sovereign]] [[authority]] in its internal affairs ...]], modern [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_Law international law] does not recognize any way of making this [[relationship]] [[compulsory]]
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  • ...nder liable to punishment by that law; especially : a gross violation of [[law]] ...nd of other civil law may rank as "[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Offence_(law) offences]" or as "infractions".
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  • ...O-SAXON_PERIOD Old English] dōm; akin to Old High German tuom condition, [[state]], [https://nordan.daynal.org/wiki/index.php?title=English#ca._600-1100.09T *1 : a [[law]] or ordinance especially in [https://www.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anglo_Saxon An
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  • ...ly authorized and usually ratified by the lawmaking [[authority]] of the [[state]] ...ial [[meaning]] which is more restricted than its meaning in international law.
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  • *1 : an order usually having the [[force]] of [[law]] ...]]s (usually established in a [[constitution]]). It has the [[force]] of [[law]]. The particular term used for this [[concept]] may vary from country to c
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  • ...egroup.com.catalog.sewanee.edu/mss/start.do?p=SPOL&u=sewa21847&authCount=1 State Papers Online, 1509-1714]''''' ...every facet of English government, including social and economic affairs, law and order, religious policy, crown possessions and intelligence gathering a
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  • :b : the [[state]] of [[being]] [https://oed.com/view/Entry/95198#eid570175 infamous] ...n Law]. The remainder of this article discusses infamy as defined by Canon Law. According to the Catholic Encyclopedia of 1913, infamy in the canonical se
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  • ...te has limited law enforcement and administration [[authority]]. In civil law systems, a magistrate might be a [[judge]] in a superior court; the magistr ...re not lawyers, but were advised by [[jurists]] who were experts in the [[law]].
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  • ...]] by a [[person]] legally entitled to do so, generally on behalf of the [[state]] by a criminal [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prosecutor prosecutor]. [[Category: Law]]
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  • ...hbishop_of_Canterbury Archbishop of Canterbury] — or to flee somewhere the law did not apply, across the border to Gretna Green, Scotland, for instance. ...ly (before, usually, their [[parents]] could object) might [[travel]] to a state without such a rule. In the musical [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guys_and
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  • ...n used throughout [[history]] to refer to raids across land borders by non-state agents. ...al authorities and therefore a legitimate form of war-like activity by non-state actors. Privateering is considered [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Commerce_
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  • *2a : the [[quality]] or [[state]] of being exigent :b : a state of affairs that makes urgent demands <a [[leader]] must [[act]] in any sudd
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  • ...ry]] forces, or other [[organizations]] involved in the [[defense]] of the state against foreign agressors; however, ''[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gendar [[Law]] enforcement, however, [[constitutes]] only part of policing [[activity]].
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  • *2: a [[legal]] action serving to cause restoration of a previous state ...[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Damages law of compensation], which is the law of loss-based recovery. [[Obligations]] to make restitution and obligations
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  • ...aw and to convict or acquit. In the words of William Blackstone, "The jury state the naked [[facts]], as they find them to be [[proved]], and pray the advic [[Category: Law]]
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  • ..., where "by [[marriage]], the [[husband]] and [[wife]] are one person in [[law]]; that is the very being or legal [[existence]] of the [[woman]] is [[susp ...example, [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yemen Yemeni] marriage regulations state that a wife must [[obey]] her husband and must not leave [[home]] without h
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  • :c : a despotic state ...was originally neither [[arbitrary]] nor unaccountable, being subject to [[law]] and requiring retrospective justification. There were no such dictatorshi
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  • ...tude or depravity of a line of conduct. This [[concept]] is important in [[law]], especially equitable matters.
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  • *1. Pathology. a. The height or acme of a disease: cf. [[State|STATE]] n. 7 and STATION n. 6. Now rare or Obs. :b. Used (with the sense ‘[[state]] or condition) in many mod.L. combinations with adj., as status arthriticu
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  • :b : the [[state]] of being insulted or [[morally]] outraged <takes offense at the slightest :b : an infraction of [[law]]; especially : misdemeanor
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  • *2 : the state of being detained; especially : a period of temporary custody prior to disp '''Detention''' generally refers to a [[state]] or [[government]] holding a [[person]] in a particular area (generally c
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  • ...f public acknowledgement of or [[apology]] for past violations, indicating state and social [[commitment]] to respond to former [[abuses]]. [[Category: Law]]
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  • *2: a body formed and [[authorized]] by [[law]] to act as a single [[person]] although constituted by one or more persons ...ganized as an organ of [[political]] [[representation]] in a corporative [[state]]
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  • *In [[law]], '''dissolution''' has multiple [[meanings]]. ...dia.org/wiki/International_law international law], dissolution is when a [[state]] has broken up into several [[entities]], and no longer has [[power]] over
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  • ...us, past participle of abrogare, from ab- + rogare to ask, [[propose]] a [[law]] — more at [[right]]. To repeal, to disregard, ignore, repudiate, to can ...[[state]]'s [[sovereign]] immunity and subject it to lawsuits to which the state has not [[consent]]ed (i.e., to "abrogate" their immunity to such suits).
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  • *1 : the [[quality]] or [[state]] of being self-governing; especially : the right of self-government *3 : a self-governing state
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  • are very closely allied with the [[state]] and [[secular]] powers–frequently there is overlapping of [[responsibil ...atholicism Roman Catholic Church], especially in the [[past]], such as the State church of the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roman_empire Roman Empire]. To
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  • ...t's [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mens_rea mens rea], [[intention]], or [[state]] of [[mind]], at the time of an act of which the defendant is accused. In some [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Common_law common law], [[jurisdictions]] such as the UK, Canada, and several Australian states,
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  • *2 a : to restore to a former [[state]] (as of efficiency, good management, or solvency) <rehabilitate slum areas ...ion]] or [[Healing|therapy]], to bring a criminal into a more [[normal]] [[state]] of [[mind]], or into an [[attitude]] which would be helpful to [[society]
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  • :b : the [[state]] of being indicted
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  • :b : of or relating to the [[state]] or its citizenry <civil strife> *3 a : of, relating to, or based on civil [[law]]
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  • :b : the common-[[law]] [[action]] to recover damages for breach of such a contract ...a promise to a covenantee to do or not do some action. In real property [[law]], the term real covenants is used for conditions tied to the use of land.
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  • ''The Library of Congress'' is the United State's oldest federal cultural [[institution]] and serves as the [[research]] ar ...e of the Librarian, Congressional Research Service, U.S. Copyright Office, Law Library of Congress, Library Services, the Office of Strategic Initiatives
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  • :c. Christian Church. The action of making known to another the state of one's conscience. rare. *2. Spanish Law. A process by which an accused person might be protected from the animosity
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  • :b : the [[quality]] or [[state]] of being mischievous : mischievousness <had mischief in his eyes> ...uction or defacement of property other than arson. [[Governed]] by state [[law]], criminal mischief is committed when a perpetrator, having no right to do
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  • ...urt on specific grounds. These grounds typically could include errors of [[law]], [[fact]], or procedure (in the United States, [https://en.wikipedia.org/ ...oner, and a party on the other side is called a respondent (in most common-law countries) or an appellee (in the United States). A cross-appeal is an appe
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  • ===Topic: ''Divine Law''=== ...built into every aspect of life in the whole Creation. By ignoring Divine Law, people build up adverse karma, which often takes several future lives to w
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  • *1 : a [[state]] of confinement or captivity ...ecially for lawbreakers; specifically : an [[institution]] (as one under [[state]] [[jurisdiction]]) for confinement of [[persons]] [[convicted]] of serious
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  • ...sion of love, thus changing it from a lower state of vibration to a higher state. In this process of change, free will allows for the individual expression ...d the solving of problems which arise out of the misapplication of natural law or the misunderstandings of living in the various stages of imperfection.
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  • Thought Adjuster: “The Law of Cause-and-Effect does not only pertain to the material world. It also en .... From the perspective of cause and effect, it is obvious that the chaotic state of your world results from bazillions of toxic thoughts and emotions. They
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  • ...n|crime]] and the penalty associated with it. It is granted by a head of [[state]], such as a monarch or president, or by a competent church [[authority]]. ...r as in [[absolute]] governments the king is law, so in free countries the law ought to be king; and there ought to be no other."
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  • ...e other, such as a balance between the metaphysical [[Law]] and [[Chaos]]; law by itself being overly controlling, chaos being overly unmanageable, balanc The twentieth century saw the development of both law and chaos in [[art]] to the point that the end product became unintelligibl
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  • ...nglo-Norman and Middle French absence (French absence) (of a [[person]]) [[state]] of being absent (beginning of the 13th cent. in Old French), want or lack *1. a. The [[state]] of [[being]] absent or away from a place, or from the company of a [[pers
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  • *the [[quality]] or [[state]] of being accountable; especially : an obligation or willingness to [[acce ...l (1994). "The Legal Codes of Ancient Israel". In Ian Shapiro. the Rule of Law. NY: New York University Press. pp. 101–119.
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  • ...from Medieval [[Latin]] civitat-, civitas, from Latin, [[citizenship]], [[state]], city of [[Rome]], from civis citizen ...unicipality in the United States governed under a charter granted by the [[state]]
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  • ...he supreme [[power]] is vested in the people; a republic or [[democratic]] state." *2 : a nation, [[state]], or other [[political]] [[unit]]: as
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  • ...t]]'), also known as a federal state,EKAS.gee is a type of [[sovereign]] [[state]] characterized by a [[union]] of partially [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ ...ts Bundesländer was a [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unitary_state unitary state] with [[administrative]] divisions that became federated, and neighboring F
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  • ...e of attempting by overt [[acts]] to overthrow the [[government]] of the [[state]] to which the offender owes allegiance or to kill or personally [[injure]] ...superior was petit treason). A [[person]] who commits treason is known in law as a traitor.
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  • *3 : the [[state]] of [[being]] adjusted * Adjustment ([[law]]) has several [[meanings]]; many relate to insurance, contracts, or the re
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  • ...e motivated to inflict torture on others for similar reasons to those of a state; however, the motive for torture can also be for the sadistic gratification ...cting in an official capacity. Torture is prohibited under international [[law]] and the domestic laws of most countries; however, Amnesty International e
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  • *2: the state or fact of disagreeing or quarreling: ''they were at variance with all thei *3: chiefly Law a discrepancy between two [[statements]] or [[documents]].
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  • ...[[fluid]] and [[artistic]]; [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roman_law Roman law] was [[dignified]] and [[respect]]-breeding. [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki ...the [[surface]] of all this [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/State_religion state religion] and found for the nourishment of their [[souls]] the real [[value
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  • * : the act of violating : the state of being violated: as [[Category: Law]]
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  • Most adults living in democracies place [[trust]] in the [[state]] of which they are a [[citizen]]. If this trust is betrayed, at its worst, ...serious mistreatment by a state institution or powerful figure within the state.
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  • :b. In religious use: Freedom from the bondage of ''sin'', or of the [[law]]. ...e of any mode of [[worship]]. liberty of the press: the recognition by the state of the right of any one to print and publish whatever he pleases without pr
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  • ...usage, a '''tyrant''' is a single ruler holding absolute [[power]] over a state or within an organization. The term carries modern connotations of a harsh ...in power by using mercenary soldiers from outside of their respective city state. [https://www.ancienthistory.abc-clio.com/library/searches/searchdisplay.as
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  • ...] of your species, are rife with [[imaginings]], which were written into [[law]]. Particularly your so-called [[religious]] [[writings]] are a prime exam There are so-called [[holy]] [[writings]], which state that ‘all women are flawed.’ This is an [[abomination]] to the [[First
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  • ...s a heavily [[politically]]-charged [[word]] frequently used to refer to [[state]]-approved murder or [[persecution]]. Proscription implies the elimination ...d man was entitled to keep part of his estate (the remainder went to the [[state]]). No person could [[inherit]] [[money]] or [[property]] from the proscrib
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  • ...rest became [[acceptable]], usury was interest above the rate allowed by [[law]]. Today, usury commonly is the charging of unreasonable or [[relatively]] In the United States, usury laws are [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/State_law state laws] that specify the maximum legal interest rate at which loans can be ma
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  • ...stituting a new [[state]] on top of the member states. Under international law a confederation respects the [[sovereignty]] of its members and its constit ...a federation and not a confederation, since it is a [[sovereign]] nation-[[state]].
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  • ...]] in [[social]] [[evolution]] and [[state]] [[development]], but to be of state [[value]] it must be nonviolent in [[expression]]. ...o which [[public]] [[opinion]] can control [[personal]] [[behavior]] and [[state]] [[regulation]] through nonviolent [[expression]]. The really civilized [[
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  • [[Family]] [[law]] [[proceedings]] which involve issues of residence and contact often gener ...] [[law]] [[courts]] were forced to defer [[jurisdiction]] to the [[home]] state.
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  • ..., artifice, misrepresentation, false accusation, malicious [[action]] at [[law]]; prob. f. calvi, calvere to devise tricks. With the phonetic development *3. Law. a. ‘An Exception taken, against either [[persons]] or [[things]]’ (
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  • ...''terreō'' meaning “I frighten”. The ''terror cimbricus'' was a panic and state of [[emergency]] in [[Rome]] in response to the approach of warriors of the ...ional [[community]], however, terrorism has no legally binding, criminal [[law]] [[definition]]. Common definitions of terrorism refer only to those viole
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  • ...custom, law," and hence means "household management" or "management of the state." An [[economist]] is a person using economic concepts and data in the cour ...tuations where there is no monetary consideration, such as [[politics]], [[law]], [[psychology]], [[history]], [[religion]], [[marriage]] and [[family]] l
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  • ...but awaits the [[appearance]] or [[determination]] of the true owner. In [[law]], the term abeyance can only be applied to such future estates as have not
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  • ...nors and legislators for ten years, and none are eligible for re-election. State [[judges]] are appointed for life by the governors and [[confirmed]] by the ...of at least seventy-five state legislatures concurred in by the respective state governors, and then but for one term. He is advised by a supercabinet compo
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  • *1. a. An [[act]] which is regarded as a transgression of the [[divine]] [[law]] and an offence against [[God]]; a violation (esp. wilful or deliberate) o ...Violation of divine law; [[action]] or conduct characterized by this; a [[state]] of transgression against God or His commands. original sin
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  • ...ns]] in which she is not head of state. The Queen also holds all powers of state in her kingdoms, but rarely [[exercises]] them. Other figureheads are the [ ...nfluence]] on [[events]]. In those systems of government where the head of state is in practice a ''figurehead'', they are also generally the titular comman
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  • ...lization]] causes the human to move into a state of [[gratitude]] and this state of gratitude will always find more reasons to be grateful — especially wh ...making always adheres to the Law of [[Cause and Effect]]; this irrefutable law has always been from time immemorial and shall forever continue.
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  • ...as in [[testimony]] to the [[facts]] of the [[matter]] in a [[court]] of [[law]]. ...d usually by a newly-appointed [[government]] officer to the people of a [[state]] before taking office. In both of those cases, though, an affirmation can
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  • A [[counsel]] or a counsellor gives advice, more particularly in [[law|legal]] matters. ...unsel, advising faculty, prudence; a deliberating [[body]], a council of [[state]], war, etc.; a counsellor: a [[word]] of the same type as colloquium, conn
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  • In [[law]], a '''trial''' is when parties to a dispute come together to present [[in ...l defendants are entitled to a trial held before a [[jury]]. Because the [[state]] is attempting to use its [[power]] to deprive the accused of life, [[libe
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  • *3 : a [[state]] of owing <deeply in debt> *4 : the common-[[law]] [[action]] for the recovery of [[money]] held to be due
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  • '''Innocence''' can also refer to a [[state]] of unknowing, where one's [[experience]] is lesser, in either a [[relativ ..., Chalmers Izett (1873). Freemasonry: Its Symbolism, Religious Nature, and Law of Perfection. Reeves and Turner. pp. 232–240.
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  • ...han the United Kingdom that acknowledges the British monarch as chief of [[state]] ..., New Zealand, Newfoundland, the Union of South Africa, and the Irish Free State. Following 1948, the term "Dominion" has been used to denote those [[indepe
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  • ...l]]) [[emancipation]]. Some sides in contemporary [[academic]] [[debate]], state that the [[morality]] of seduction depends on the long-term [[impacts]] on [[English]] common [[law]] defined the [[crime]] of seduction as a felony committed "when a [[male]]
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  • ...[institution]] (433 BC) their office was limited to eighteen months by a [[law]] of the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roman_dictator dictator] Mamercus A ...of [[duty]], and were not [[responsible]] to any other [[power]] in the [[state]].
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  • ...ception's [[form]], [[adapted]] to [[this world]], of [[God]]'s more basic law; that [[love]] creates itself, and nothing but itself. [[God's law]]s do not obtain directly to a world [[perception]] rules, for such a world
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  • ...o choose between doing their job or satisfying their selfish impulses. The state of your world and your governments eloquently suggest that those you have c ...love to be the only law that governs this planet, you should make love the law that governs your life. This planet will only progress spiritually when eac
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  • ...lished. Since, according to [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canon_law canon law], this [[permission]] must be preceded by a declaration (known as a ''[http ...chetical texts, and school textbooks on [[Scripture]], [[theology]], canon law, church history, or religious or moral subjects. It is recommended, but wit
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  • *1 a : the [[action]] or the [[legal]] [[process]] of indicting b : the [[state]] of being indicted In the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Common_law common law] legal [[system]], an indictment (pronounced /ɪnˈdaɪtmənt/ in-DITE-mən
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  • ...r [[cult]]. Countries with a [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/State_religion state religion] are the most punitive users of blasphemy laws. [[Category: Law]]
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  • ...nal work in [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_law international law]. ...dependent States, Large or Small, Shall Come under the Dominion of Another State by Inheritance, Exchange, Purchase, or Donation"
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  • ==Law== In [[law]], a '''default''' is the failure to do something required by [[law]] or to appear at a required [[time]] in legal proceedings.
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  • ...tate-owned enterprises. Businesses can also be formed not-for-profit or be state-owned. The etymology of "business" relates to the [[state]] of being busy either as an [[individual]] or [[society]] as a whole, doin
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  • *1 : the [[act]] of suspending : the [[state]] or period of being suspended: as a : temporary removal (as from office or :c : temporary abrogation of a [[law]] or rule
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  • ...[[state]] with the goal of seeking [[criminal]] [[sanction]]s, such as the State (also sometimes called the People) or Crown (in Commonwealth realms). In th [[Category: Law]]
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