Codified in a sentence as an adjective

It probably wasn't codified in law until much later and it's one of the fastest growing categories.

You have an internal definition of 'fair share' which is inconsistent with what the folks who govern the UK have codified as 'fair share.

Software is, in one sense, bureaucracy codified in mechanical form.

There has never been a successful society of an serious complexity that had law that could be codified in a form where one person could understand them all.

On one level, we all know this stuff already -- it's been codified as myths, proverbs, clichs, bromides, epigrams, parables: the skeleton of every great story.

"The system" is represented by a codified set of strictures that are put in place by a variety of people representing what they assert are the best interests of "the people.

I am not sure how well that applies to a protocol that is supposed to be codified in every single browser, web server and utility library in the world.

Thus, when Congress codified them, it specifically provided that the fair-use determination was to "include" those factors but was not to be limited to them.

I think this article exemplifies the difference between the kinds of things you see codified in books and on the internet, versus what's active research and well known folk lore in academia.

Even tech startups are increasingly becoming a systematic, codified industry.

What is worse, the four statutory factors, though first codified by Congress in the 1976 Copyright Act, had first been developed by courts long before that and were never the exclusive factors to be used in making a fair-use determination.

I do think he's physiologically incapable of sitting at a desk, taking orders, living in an extremely codified manner where one has to respect certain hierarchies, hide certain feelings, etc. - and that perhaps he has now found a way to detach himself from it.

Codified definitions

adjective

enacted by a legislative body; "statute law"; "codified written laws"