Before studying the definitions, try reasoning out the meaning of each word, using context as .your guide. — КиберПедия 

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Before studying the definitions, try reasoning out the meaning of each word, using context as .your guide.

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Before studying the definitions, try reasoning out the meaning of each word, using context as .your guide. 0.00 из 5.00 0 оценок
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1. Our new principal announced that he plans to abrogate some of the school roles and institute others, which has us all wondering what will be abolished and what established.

Key: Synonym Abrogate means _______________.

2. When a sad-eyed holstein cow (голштинской породы) was discovered in school the morning after Halloween, certain sophomores were accused, then later acquitted when the guilty juniors confessed.

Keys: Logic, antonym Acquit means _________________.

3. The principal encouraged our student Disciplinary Review Board to adjudicate the Holstein Affair and later told us how pleased he was withour judicial process.

Key: Near definition Adjudicate means ______________.

4. The advocate for the sophomores' defense was the biology teacher, who'd hosted a party for the sophomores at his house on Halloween.

Key: Logic Advocate means _______________

5. After hearing our sentence for the juniors, their advocate asked that we commute it to only one week of floor scrubbing instead of two, because the guilty ones had come forth voluntarily—and had returned the cow intact.

Keys: Logic, example Commute means ______________.

6. One of the messiest cases our Disciplinary Review Board had to settle concerned upper-class students who were extorting exam questions and answers from two frightened freshmen who worked part-time in the school office.

Key: Logic Extort means __________________.

7. Students from other schools who are found misbehaving on our school property are extradited to their own schools for disciplinary action.

Keys: Logic, example Extradite means ________________.

8. Our student court would never deal with a crime as serious as a felony.

Key: Logic Felony means __________________.

9. We had always known that our biology teacher was a skilled debater, but we were especially impressed with his forensic skills when he defended the sophomores.

Key: Logic Forensic means ________________.

10. The innocent sophomores in the Holstein Affair realized that their own reputations had indicted them before trial. Since their acquittal, they have all been model students.

Key: Logic Indict means ___________________.

11. The juniors were relieved that the owner of the holstein did not charge them with larceny. As his cow was worth several hundred dollars, their theft would have been considered grand larceny had the animal died or disappeared.

Key: Synonym Larceny means _________________.

12. We were able to assign fair punishment for the offenders in the Holstein Affair within the confines of our school, whereas formal litigation in court would have embarrassed everyone.

Keys: Logic, contrast Litigation means ________________.

13. Our local mayor had been suspected of wrongdoing for several months, so it was actually a relief to the town when he was brought to court on a charge of malfeasance.

Keys: Synonym, example Malfeasance means ______________.

14. Not wishing to be convicted of malfeasance, the mayor lied under oath, but he was caught at that as well, and perjury was added to his list of offences.

Key: Definition Perjury means __________________.

15. The sanction attached to smoking on our school grounds is a three-day suspension, which, as Dad said, "Certainly puts teeth into that rule."

Keys: Near definition, example Sanction means _________________.

16. In government class we discussed the law of torts, which came to us from England with the colonists. A tort is a legal wrong committed on the person or property of another independent of contract—such as trespass, nuisance, and defamation of character.

Keys: Definition, examples Tort means _____________________

17. Unlike New York City—vast, impersonal home of the bag ladies—our town is so small that a vagrant is immediately noticed and cared for.

Keys: Logic, example Vagrant means _________________.

 

Word Study

After a Latin lesson, you are in fine etymological shape for learning legal terms. Like habeas corpus and corpus delicti, many have come verbatim from Latin into the English language. Not long ago, a list of law terms would have appeared in a text like this. Now, the number of legal suits has greatly increased, along with our awareness of human rights, so that everyone needs to understand legal terminology.

A state is better governed which has but few laws, and those laws strictly observed.

Rene Descartes (1596-1650)

 

1. abrogate v. to annul, abolish or legally do away with; from L. ab + rogare, to ask, propose a law

The word abrogate comes directly from the old Roman senate mat asked the people abrogare legem (to speak, or solicit, against the law) when they wished to repeal a law.

Relative: abrogation

Synonyms: annul,nullify

Antonym: establish

2. acquit v. to free of blame or obligation entirely; to behave well or acceptably, as the novice class acquitted itself with distinction at the tournament; from L. ad + quite, free of

We had blamed Marigold for attracting a stray black cat, but she was acquitted when we realized that the stray was wooing young Poucette. Relatives: acquittal, acquittance (legal document/receipt) Synonyms: exonerate, exculpate; behave (second meaning)

Antonyms: accuse, inculpate

3. adjudicate v. to settle by legal process as a judge does, or to act as judge; from L. ad + judicare, to judge

Newly elected members to the Disciplinary Review Board think they will be able to adjudicate students' problems with ease, but they learn otherwise.

Relatives: adjudicator, adjudge, adjudicative, adjudication, adjudicatory

4. advocate n. one who pleads a case or represents the accused, as a lawyer; anyone who defends or acts as champion for a cause or proposal. v. to speak or write in favor of, as his essay advocates/ever elections for longer terms of office; from L. ad + vocare, to call, summon.

At the famous Scopes trial in 1925, the respected advocate for the defense, ClarenceDarrow, said, "Ido not pretend to know where many ignorant men are sure that is all that agnosticism means."

Relatives: advocator, advocation, advocative

Synonyms: n., lawyer, solicitor

Antonym: v., decry

5. commute v. to reduce or change a penalty or punishment to something less demanding; in law, to commutate; also to go back and forth with regularity, as he commutes/row New Jersey to New York every day; from L. commutare, to exchange

The felon's sentence was commuted to twenty years when his rehabilitation became obvious to everyone.

Relatives: commutation, commutate, commutable, commuter, commute (n., the trip)

6. extort v. to get something from another by force, power, intimidation, wits, etc.; to wring, as he extorted a confession from the accused man; from L. ex + torquere, to twist, wring

When more of the people's sustenance is exacted through the form of taxation than is necessary... such exaction becomes ruthless extortion and a violation of the fundamental principles of a free government.

Relatives: extortion (gross overcharge, usually of money), extorter, extortive,extortioner, extortionate, extortionately

Synonyms: educe', extract; elicit (second meaning)

7. extradite v. to hand over an accused person to the authority with proper jurisdiction to try the case; from L. ex- + tradition-, traditio, act of handing over International criminals are often extradited to their home countries, but exceptions have occurred when a victimized country refuses to extradite terrorists.

Relatives: extradition, extraditable

8. felony n. a crime serious enough to be legally declared a felony, usually incurring a severe penalty such as imprisonment for longer than a year or death;-from L. fellon-, fello, villain, evildoer

Relatives: felon (criminal), feloniously, felonry (the convict population)

9. forensic adj. referring to or used in law courts or discussion and debate; argumentative or rhetorical; from L. forensis, public, from forum. The aim of forensic oratory is to teach, to delight, to move.

Relatives: forensic (n., an exercise in argument), forensically

10. indict v. to accuse or charge with a wrong; to charge with a crime by due process of law; possibly from L. in + dicere, to pronounce, utter Injustice is difficult to bear, and we remember times when we were unfairly indicted.

Relatives: indictment, indicter (-or), indictable

Synonyms: accuse, inculpate

Antonyms: absolve, exculpate

11. larceny n. theft; any offense by which property is gotten illegally; from L. latrocinium, robbery

"You're a mouse studying to be a rat," Wilson Mizner said, Just as we ought say that petit larceny differs from grand larceny only in size, -Relatives: larcenist, larcenous, larcenously

Synonym: theft

12. litigation n. a legal suit in a court of law, a lawsuit; from L. lit-, lis, lawsuit + agere, to drive

Large, wealthy corporations must employ numerous lawyers for litigation, some of which is justifiable and some surely reprehensible for its waste of court time and everyone's money.

Relatives: litigant (n., one party to a lawsuit), litigant (adj.); litigate, litigable, litigious

Synonym: lawsuit

13. malfeasance n. official misconduct or wrongdoing, usually by someone in charge of public affairs; from Anglo-Norman, malfeasance, doing evil The governor's shady dealings in the awarding of public contracts came to light and resulted in his trial and eventual conviction of malfeasance.

14. perjury n. lying under oath, either by saying something untrue or by failing to do what was promised in the oath; from L. per + jurare, to swear. An oath, an oath, I have an oath in heaven:

Shall I lay perjury upon my soul? No, not for Venice.

Shakespeare, The Merchant of Venice

Relatives: perjure (v.), perjurer, perjurious, perjuriously

15. sanction v. to confirm or authorize; to endorse, approve, or support; n. authorization, support, or approval; that which gives force to a law, such as the penalty for breaking that law or the reward for upholding it or enforcing it; used in pl.: forceful, coercive measures to ensure compliance with law (usually international sanctions); from L. sancire, to make sacred.

I cannot sanction your attendance at a street gathering that is apt to become dangerous. It will take the pressure of international sanctions to preserve many sea creatures from extinction.

Relatives: sanctipner, sanctionable

Synonyms: v., authorize, endorse, approve

n., authorization, support,approval

Antonyms: v., disapprove, interdict

n., disapproval

16. tort n. with the exception of breach of contract, a wrongful act against another that results in injury or damage and for which satisfaction can legally be obtained; from L. torquere, to twist

The U.S. law of torts, developed to protect a wide range of human interests against wrong, has its roots in the Norman Conquest of England in 1066, when the English common law was born.

17. vagrant n. someone lacking a definite home who wanders from place to place; a wanderer, rover; someone whose behavior is socially unacceptable, e.g., a drunkard, who can legally be classified a vagrant, adj. roving, wandering, or fleeting, with no set course, as a vagrant thought; random; from Anglo-Norman, vagaraunt, vagrant.

Gifted actress-comedienne Lucilte Ball no doubt enjoyed her challenging role as a New York vagrant in the television play "Stone Pillow."

Relatives: vagrancy, vagrantly

Synonyms: n., wanderer, rover, vagabond, tramp adj., random, roving, wandering, errant

 

 

Root Study

This collection of roots deals mainly with people and the law.

1. DEM and PLEB mean people.

democracy - system of government wherein the people role directly or through their elected representatives; literacy, rule by the people

endemic - confined within a specific, local area; native, as opposed to epidemic, which refers to something affecting many people at me same time, or pandemic, referring to anything occurring throughout a large area and affecting a high proportion of the population

demagogue - a false leader of people who says what the people want to hear

plebiscite - a vote by all people in a country/district

plebeian - rode, common, low, coarse or erode, as plebeian tasks; literally, of the common people

 

2. DIC/DICT means to speak, say.

verdict -the official ruling of a court or authority interdict-n., a prohibition, a formal decree that forbids something v., to forbid with authority, refuse to sanction

malediction -a curse, execration

dictator - one whose word is law, who exercises total control and authority

jurisdiction - the power and authority to apply/interpret law; literally, speaking in judgment

 

3. JUD, JUR, and JUS mean judge.

judicial - referring to a judge; in a considerate, deliberate, and thoughtful manner

jurisprudence - the body of law with its working system; science/philosophy of law

justice - a person, as a chief justice (judge); the acknowledged fair result, fairness

abjure - to reject, renounce, or forswear, as People on diets abjure desserts.

adjure - to charge or command solemnly, to order, as I adjure you to ignore that chocolate cake.

 

4. JUNCT, JUG, and JOIN mean to join, to marry, mating.

junction - a place of meeting or joining

injunction - a court order requiring you to do or to refrain from doing something; an order or admonition

conjugal - referring to marriage, matrimonial

joint - adj., combined, united; as joint effort n., a skeletal point of contact, as the elbow or knee joint; large piece of roasting meat; anywhere two things or parts are joined (Note: The root LEG means law. Remember legislate, legal, illegal, legacy. A. paralegal employ ее is one who works with the law but lacks a degree in law.)

Using the Words

 

Exercise I. Translation.


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