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pre-emption vs judicial doctrine

judicial doctrine vs pre-emption

pre-emption and judicial doctrine both are nouns.

Word NounAdjectiveVerbAdverb
pre-emption Yes No No No
judicial doctrine Yes No No No
As nouns, judicial doctrine is a hypernym of pre-emption; that is, judicial doctrine is a word with a broader meaning than pre-emption:
  • pre-emption: the judicial principle asserting the supremacy of federal over state legislation on the same subject
  • judicial doctrine: (law) a principle underlying the formulation of jurisprudence
Other hypernyms of pre-emption include judicial principle, legal principle.
pre-emption (noun) judicial doctrine (noun)
a prior appropriation of something (law) a principle underlying the formulation of jurisprudence
the right to purchase something in advance of others
the right of a government to seize or appropriate something (as property)
the judicial principle asserting the supremacy of federal over state legislation on the same subject
Difference between pre-emption and judicial doctrine

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