Juridical
11juridical days — noun plural Etymology: translation of Latin dies juridici : days on which courts are open * * * days in court on which law is administered; days on which the court can lawfully sit. * * * juridical days plural noun Days on which law courts are in …
12juridical — also juridic adjective Etymology: Latin juridicus, from jur , jus + dicere to say more at diction Date: 1502 1. of or relating to the administration of justice or the office of a judge 2. of or relating to law or jurisprudence ; legal •… …
13juridical — juridically, adv. /joo rid i keuhl/, adj. 1. of or pertaining to the administration of justice. 2. of or pertaining to law or jurisprudence; legal. Also, juridic. [1495 1505; < L juridic(us) (juri , comb. form of jus law + dic , base of dicere to …
14juridical — Synonyms and related words: actionable, applicable, authorized, competent, constitutional, critical, judgmental, judicative, judicatorial, judicatory, judicial, judiciary, judicious, juridic, jurisdictional, jurisdictive, juristic, just,… …
15juridical — ju|rid|i|cal [dʒuˈrıdıkəl] adj formal [Date: 1500 1600; : Latin; Origin: juridicus, from jus ( JUST2) + dicere to say ] relating to judges or the law …
16juridical — ju|rid|i|cal [ dʒu rıdıkl ] adjective VERY FORMAL relating to courts or the law …
17juridical — ju·rid·i·cal || ‚dÊ’ÊŠ rɪdɪkl /‚dÊ’ÊŠÉ™ r adj. legal, of the law …
18juridical — [dʒʊ rɪdɪk(ə)l] adjective Law relating to judicial proceedings and the law. Derivatives juridically adverb Origin C16: from L. juridicus (from jus, jur law + dicere say ) + al …
19juridical — a. Judicial, forensic …
20juridical — adjective formal connected with judges or the law …