Juridical in a sentence as an adjective

In a juridical context, "found corrupt" means something like "a judge ruled that X is corrupt".

[3][1] If you hold the 10th amendment and its juridical descendants to have meaning.

Just in case a real juridical emergency should arise.

That may seem strange, but in Europe there are places where a similar "juridical" system was used too, which is, in Sicily.

When I comment on things, it is from that perspective, not from a juridical precedence perspective, like you.

You obviously have no idea how the Swedish juridical system works.

If he's not infringing, he'll winI gues this is how it should work in any modern country with working juridical system.

This proves that some API providers want to keep juridical and commercial protection out of their APIs, as it was a patent.

Aside from the law of nature, I remarked the use of precedents as a co-basis for juridical mediation.

However, one needs also to consider extra-juridical means.

But the militarized quasi-Schmittian state organs devoted to enforcement them, and their attendant juridical pretexts, are of a more recent vintage.

There is a very long legislative and juridical history you can dive into to fully understand exactly how the commerce powers have been worked out over the last couple hundred years.

Also, if one sees a juridical trend in which the courts' decisions appear to be failing their purpose in the contracted balance of powers, I think we hit a point where, from a critical theoretic point of view, we've got serious trouble.

Four years of Yanukovych's rule have been time of creeping, steady and all-embracing corruption: economic, business, political, juridical, legislative, social.

I am capable of comprehending abstractions, extrapolations, generalisations, and juridical pragmatism in the public interest.

> Beyond all Companies/Organizations are not GovernmentsAll juridical entities other than individual persons -- and this definitely includes all corporations -- are creations of government through which special privileges are given to particular individuals on the theory that by doing so some common good will be served.

Juridical definitions

adjective

of or relating to the law or jurisprudence; "juridical days"

See also: juridic

adjective

relating to the administration of justice or the function of a judge; "judicial system"

See also: judicial juridic