Juridical

Word JURIDICAL
Character 9
Hyphenation N/A
Pronunciations /dʒʊˈɹɪdɪkəl/

Definitions and meanings of "Juridical"

What do we mean by juridical?

Of or relating to the law and its administration. adjective

Pertaining to the promulgation or dispensation of law; founded upon or according to the forms of law; relating to or concerned with administrative law: as, a juridical argument; juridical methods; juridical oppression.

Subsisting in contemplation of law; of the nature of an abstract legal conception: as, a juridical person, or a juridical transaction (that is to say, a person or transaction legally supposed or conceived of to some extent irrespective of actual existence and of incidents and circumstances not recognized by the law).

Pertaining to the law or rule of law, legal; judicial, related to the administration of justice (as to jurisprudence, or to the function of a judge or court). adjective

Relating to the administration of justice or the function of a judge adjective

Of or relating to the law or jurisprudence adjective

Pertaining to the law or rule of law, legal; judicial, related to the administration of justice (as to jurisprudence, or to the function of a judge or court).

Synonyms and Antonyms for Juridical

  • Antonyms for juridical
  • Juridical antonyms not found!

The word "juridical" in example sentences

_Vyavahára_, may be called the juridical rules, embracing as well substantive law as the procedure and practice of legal tribunals. ❋ W.A [Translator] Montriou (N/A)

In all this the chief of the so-called juridical police, Bidet "Fauxpas, " played an important part. ❋ Trotsky, Leon (1930)

There remain still two other points of difference which require to be considered, namely the juridical condition, which distinguishes religious orders from congregations, and the rule. ❋ 1840-1916 (1913)

Again I exclude all those compromises between abstract and experimental sciences which supply the whole ballast of the semi-sciences called juridical, political, and historical. ❋ Unknown (1887)

In the case of the moral imperative, and the supposition of freedom which it necessarily involves, the law, the power (to fulfil it) and the rational will that determines the maxim, constitute all the elements that form the notion of juridical duty. ❋ Immanuel Kant (1764)

Take the Prison Litigation Reform Act of 1995, which made it nearly impossible for inmates to sue prison authorities, and has put thousands of Americans beyond the reach of any kind of juridical authority. ❋ Chase Madar (2010)

In 1999, however, federal courts began to allow hundreds of ATS suits alleging that a corporation -- a "juridical" person -- could also be an enemy of mankind. ❋ Ben Kerschberg (2010)

They exercised privileges such as juridical sovereignty, the right to send their children to the calmecac (school of the elite class), and the management of the major urban markets. ❋ Unknown (2006)

One of those “fundamental problems”: the CIA insisted on an overly strict "juridical" standard to confirm reports of purported Iraq-Al Qaeda contacts were actually true. ❋ Unknown (2007)

There is a very real danger that relying on the texts themselves will produce a narrow, unwarranted legalism, a kind of juridical straitjacket that suffocates legitimate renewal. ❋ Unknown (2009)

Worries over the "juridical" or declarative tone of the draft derive, for many bishops, from a deeper concern over whether the Covenant is too oriented towards maintenance and focussed on institutional preservation. ❋ Unknown (2008)

a result, today the state itself is looked upon as a kind of juridical and moral person, having its own rights apart from and superior to the individual rights of all the members, whether viewed individually or collec - tively. ❋ GAINES POST (1968)

"juridical" in our common life at diocesan and provincial level; what is new is that the CDG has tried to utilise such concepts at a new level of communion life. ❋ Unknown (2008)

Each treatment follows the same format outlined above beginning by stating the type of parable (e.g., "juridical" i.e. a ❋ Unknown (2008)

As for Caravaggio's "sexual orientation," we have no reliable evidence of what it was, laying aside the fact that "homosexuality," as a word, did not exist in Baroque Rome; nor was there any corresponding juridical concept or counter-cultural lifestyle. ❋ Dan Hofstadter (2011)

Cross Reference for Juridical

What does juridical mean?

Best Free Book Reviews
Best IOS App Reviews