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All judicature synonyms

ju·di·ca·ture
J j

noun judicature

  • amends — recompense or compensation given or gained for some injury, insult, etc
  • appeal — If you appeal to someone to do something, you make a serious and urgent request to them.
  • authorization — an authorizing or being authorized
  • charter — A charter is a formal document describing the rights, aims, or principles of an organization or group of people.
  • code — A code is a set of rules about how people should behave or about how something must be done.
  • compensation — Compensation is money that someone who has experienced loss or suffering claims from the person or organization responsible, or from the state.
  • consideration — Consideration is careful thought about something.
  • correction — Corrections are marks or comments made on a piece of work, especially school work, which indicate where there are mistakes and what are the right answers.
  • credo — A credo is a set of beliefs, principles, or opinions that strongly influence the way a person lives or works.
  • creed — A creed is a set of beliefs, principles, or opinions that strongly influence the way people live or work.
  • decree — A decree is an official order or decision, especially one made by the ruler of a country.
  • equity — The quality of being fair and impartial.
  • evenness — The quality of being even.
  • hearing — the faculty or sense by which sound is perceived.
  • impartiality — not partial or biased; fair; just: an impartial judge.
  • judicatory — of or relating to judgment or the administration of justice; judiciary: judicatory power.
  • justness — the quality or state of being just, equitable, or right: His justness was never doubted.
  • legality — the state or quality of being in conformity with the law; lawfulness.
  • legalization — to make legal; authorize.
  • legitimacy — the state or quality of being legitimate.
  • litigation — the act or process of litigating: a matter that is still in litigation.
  • penalty — a punishment imposed or incurred for a violation of law or rule.
  • reasonableness — agreeable to reason or sound judgment; logical: a reasonable choice for chairman.
  • recompense — to repay; remunerate; reward, as for service, aid, etc.
  • rectitude — rightness of principle or conduct; moral virtue: the rectitude of her motives.
  • redress — the setting right of what is wrong: redress of abuses.
  • reparation — the making of amends for wrong or injury done: reparation for an injustice.
  • review — a form of theatrical entertainment in which recent events, popular fads, etc., are parodied.
  • sanction — authoritative permission or approval, as for an action.
  • sentence — Grammar. a grammatical unit of one or more words that expresses an independent statement, question, request, command, exclamation, etc., and that typically has a subject as well as a predicate, as in John is here. or Is John here? In print or writing, a sentence typically begins with a capital letter and ends with appropriate punctuation; in speech it displays recognizable, communicative intonation patterns and is often marked by preceding and following pauses.
  • constitutionality — In a particular political system, the constitutionality of a law or action is the fact that it is allowed by the constitution.
  • fair play — just and honorable treatment, action, or conduct: The political campaign was notably lacking in fair play.
  • square deal — the stated policy of President Theodore Roosevelt, originally promising fairness in all dealings with labor and management and later extended to include other groups.
  • court — A court is a place where legal matters are decided by a judge and jury or by a magistrate.
  • court of law — When you refer to a court of law, you are referring to a legal court, especially when talking about the evidence that might be given in a trial.
  • tribunal — a court of justice.
  • judges — a public officer authorized to hear and decide cases in a court of law; a magistrate charged with the administration of justice.
  • assizes — (formerly in England and Wales) the sessions, usually held four times a year, of the principal court in each county, exercising civil and criminal jurisdiction, attended by itinerant judges: replaced in 1971 by crown courts
  • bar — A bar is a place where you can buy and drink alcoholic drinks.
  • bench — A bench is a long seat of wood or metal that two or more people can sit on.
  • courts — Plural form of court.
  • law court — court of law.
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