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Example sentences for "juristic"

Lexicographically close words:
jurisdiction; jurisdictional; jurisdictions; jurisprudence; jurist; jurists; jurney; juro; juror; jurors
  1. The Western writings are distinguished from their Eastern kin by the entry of the juristic element, filling them with a mass of conceptions from the Roman Law.

  2. A prime illustration is afforded by the Latin juristic word persona used in the Creed.

  3. Now it is certainly true that only legal differences can be settled by a juristic decision of the underlying juristic question, whatever may be the way in which such decision is arrived at.

  4. But although political differences cannot be the objects of juristic decision, they can be settled short of war by amicable or compulsive means.

  5. And legal differences, although within the scope of juristic decision, can be of such kinds as to prevent the parties from submitting them to such decision, without being of a nature that they cannot be settled peaceably at all.

  6. Apart from this in the empire, the municipalities as they grew up were considered "juristic persons" who were entitled to receive and hold property.

  7. On a pia causa it was not necessary to confer a juristic personality.

  8. Property could only be left to an authorized juristic person, being a municipality or a collegium.

  9. This development of Hebrew jurisprudence along lines of written and oral law, Pentateuch and Talmud, Mosaic ordinance and time-honored tradition, seems to have followed in obedience to a general principle of juristic growth.

  10. It is impossible to frame any legal argument upon any other basis than that of the agreement or nonagreement of law and fact, in a juristic sense; and upon this plan errors will be discussed and the Brief will be framed.

  11. Orthodox theology and the juristic system associated with it, especially that of Carpzov, justified this assumption in what is called the =episcopal system=.

  12. In Göschel, at least, there was a thinker who imparted to jurisprudence a Christian character, and to Christianity a juristic construction.

  13. The clumsiness of such formal declarations was, as I have said, only surpassed by the regrettable impression of a juristic argument produced by our first Lusitania Note.

  14. The Convention Tribune, which has paused at such sight, commences again,--droning mere Juristic Oratory.

  15. But even the well-meaning Theodoric takes steps in the interests of substantial justice which from a juristic point of view it would be hard to justify.

  16. Theodor Storm's father was an attorney in Husum and commanded universal respect on account of his unselfishness, punctilious sense of honor, and clear-sightedness in juristic matters.

  17. Whereupon follows a juristic treatment of jus, justitia, judicium, restitutio, acceptio personarum; then homicide and other crimes recognized by law.

  18. From the time of this inception of juristic studies, the talents of the doctors, and the city's fame, drew a prodigious concourse of students from all the lands of western Europe.

  19. It is obvious that this difference of intellectual attitude and of juristic training must exercise a far-reaching influence on the interpretation and construction of international enactments.

  20. And the joint labours of judges of diverse nationalities in these international courts will influence their mutual understanding in a manner which will be serviceable to the juristic methods of the different peoples.

  21. How great is the divergence of juristic method can only be appreciated by one who has practised and been called to the teaching of law in different countries.

  22. In worse plight than even the employment of foreign literature is the understanding of foreign juristic methods.

  23. Now, just as the outlook of its people is incorporated in the law of every state, so the specific mode of thought and the logical attitude of any given people are mirrored in its juristic methods.

  24. But such a broadly catholic position was still in the future, and for Malik, juristic agreement meant the agreement of Medina, though there are signs that he permitted the same latitude to other places also.

  25. It is a collection of about seventeen hundred traditions of juristic importance, arranged according to subject, with appended remarks on the usage of Medina and on his own view of each matter.

  26. The only idea intelligible to the majority was a juristic and political notion, viz.

  27. Tertullian smoothed over these difficulties by juristic distinctions, for all his elucidations of "substance" and "person" are of this nature.

  28. Whenever he attempts in any place to prove the intrinsic necessity of these dogmas, he seldom gets beyond rhetorical statements, holy paradoxes, or juristic forms.

  29. Having disposed of Duehring's juristic claims Engels proceeds to discuss "Freedom and Necessity" as follows.

  30. The economic idea of ground-rent, which Herr Duehring undertakes to explain to us, is transformed right away into the juristic concept so that we are no further than at first.

  31. In this second and polemical branch of his exposition, Ulrichs assumes, for his juristic starting-point, that each human being is born with natural rights which legislation ought not to infringe but protect.

  32. Medico-juristic science made a considerable step when Casper adopted this distinction of two types of sexual inversion.

  33. He contends that the prevalent juristic conception of crime rests upon ignorance of nature, brute-life, savagery, and the gradual emergence of morality.

  34. Julianus was also the author of independent juristic works.

  35. Under Marcus Aurelius the colleges were recognized as juristic persons, with power to manumit slaves and receive legacies.

  36. Their choice was the elderly senator Marcus Cocceius Nerva, one of a family distinguished for its juristic attainments.

  37. The object of this codification was the collection in a convenient form of all the sources of law then in force, and the settlement of controversies in the interpretative juristic literature.

  38. His successor as head of the school, Salvius Julianus, was of equal juristic distinction; his codification of praetorian law received imperial sanction from Hadrian, and became the authorised civil code.

  39. As if giving a name and juristic classification to any kind of conduct were adding to men's motives for indulging in it.

  40. Among others the great Aquinas had protested against the juristic doctrine that the law is the pleasure of the prince.

  41. A political check is preferred to a juristic check.

  42. It is very difficult to subject the whole field of Irish legislation to juristic principles, but it is comparatively easy to exempt from that field the subject matter of particular Acts.

  43. The development of juristic literature admits of being more distinctly recognized.


  44. The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "juristic" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.
    Other words:
    critical; judicial; judiciary; judicious; juridical