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Commandments - Law Dictionary Search Results

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King's Bench

might remove with the King as he thought proper to command. The jurisdiction of the court was very high. It kept

Generalissimo

The chief commander of an army especially the commander in chief of an

Imperative

Expressive of command containing positive command authoritatively or absolutely directive commanding authoritative as

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Admiral

[derived through the Fr. amiral, from Amir al Bahir, Arab., commander of the sea or fleet], an officer having high command

Civil Law

Edicts, which was made perpetual by Salvius Julianus, at the command of the Emperor Hadrian, many years later. (5) The Codes

Writ

the name of a state or other competent legal authority, commanding addressee to do or refrain from doing some specified act,

officer

: one who holds an office of trust, authority, or command [the directors, s, employees, and shareholders of a corporation] 3

Precept

Precept, a rule authoritatively given; a mandate: (1) A command in writing by a justice of the peace or other

Lawful authorities

to exercise public power, to require obedience to their lawful commands, and to command or act in the public name, Black's

Mandatary

[fr. mandatarius, Lat.], he to whom a mandate, charge, or commandment is given; also he that obtains a benefice by mandamus.

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Commandments - Law Dictionary Search Results

Research workspace

Save terms and build your research trail

A free trial unlocks notes, tags, search history, and the full AI Studio desk for judgment research.

King's Bench

might remove with the King as he thought proper to command. The jurisdiction of the court was very high. It kept

Generalissimo

The chief commander of an army especially the commander in chief of an

Imperative

Expressive of command containing positive command authoritatively or absolutely directive commanding authoritative as

Keep your definitions linked to case research

Admiral

[derived through the Fr. amiral, from Amir al Bahir, Arab., commander of the sea or fleet], an officer having high command

Civil Law

Edicts, which was made perpetual by Salvius Julianus, at the command of the Emperor Hadrian, many years later. (5) The Codes

Writ

the name of a state or other competent legal authority, commanding addressee to do or refrain from doing some specified act,

officer

: one who holds an office of trust, authority, or command [the directors, s, employees, and shareholders of a corporation] 3

Precept

Precept, a rule authoritatively given; a mandate: (1) A command in writing by a justice of the peace or other

Lawful authorities

to exercise public power, to require obedience to their lawful commands, and to command or act in the public name, Black's

Mandatary

[fr. mandatarius, Lat.], he to whom a mandate, charge, or commandment is given; also he that obtains a benefice by mandamus.

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