Premeditation in a sentence as a noun

Do you get fines as a regular citizen if you lie with premeditation to a judge or do you get jail time?

That seems like a significantly higher bar and also would require a great deal more premeditation.

As a premeditation I suggest we all start to cogitate on the preternatural property of the number 2: it being a "magic number".

It's the distinctly non-imminent premeditation that makes the difference.

Can you prepare for something unconsciously?The point was probably to emphasize the premeditation of it, and I agree it was needlessly verbose.

Interestingly, the current mating and segregation trends, to the extent they exist, appear to be completely "natural" and lacking in premeditation.

From their searches of course!It comes up in criminal cases all the time -- when you're googling "age of consent laws" or "how to dispose of a dead body" it's pretty easy to establish premeditation, though that doesn't help with 'pre-crime'.The GP may have been focused on finding known fugitives on the run.

Of course, I suppose I have libertarian leanings that wire me in a manner that make it very difficult to understand why government intervention is seen as a panaceaThat said, I'm not precisely sure your example is quite as clear cut in terms of free speech as there are other laws which deal with matters of public safety, premeditation and the sorts, and calling for someone's ****** could easily fit into categories outside free speech, depending largely on the circumstances.

Premeditation definitions

noun

planning or plotting in advance of acting

See also: forethought

noun

(law) thought and intention to commit a crime well in advance of the crime; goes to show criminal intent