the learned profession that is mastered by graduate study in a law school and that is responsible for the judicial system | a failure to maintain a higher state |
a rule or body of rules of conduct inherent in human nature and essential to or binding upon human society | turning in the opposite direction |
a generalization that describes recurring facts or events in nature | returning to a former state |
the branch of philosophy concerned with the law and the principles that lead courts to make the decisions they do | (genetics) a return to a normal phenotype (usually resulting from a second mutation) |
legal document setting forth rules governing a particular kind of activity | a reappearance of an earlier characteristic |
the collection of rules imposed by authority | (law) an interest in an estate that reverts to the grantor (or his heirs) at the end of some period (e.g., the death of the grantee) |
the force of policemen and officers | |