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Lawmaking   /lˈɔmˌeɪkɪŋ/   Listen
Lawmaking

noun
1.
The act of making or enacting laws.  Synonyms: legislating, legislation.






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Lawmaking" Quotes from Famous Books



... return from this mission, serious, sober young Fairfax (he was twenty-three at the time) offered himself as a burgess for Frederick County and was duly elected. He followed his father to Williamsburg, where he found attractions more absorbing than lawmaking. After "several opportunities of visiting Miss Cary" he fell a victim to the wiles and graces of the belle of the season. The Virginia Gazette for December 1748 carried this bit of social news: ...
— Seaport in Virginia - George Washington's Alexandria • Gay Montague Moore

... these cases, aside from the fact that they were not very remunerative. On occasions gentlemen from different parts of the State, and some from outside of it who had certain favours to ask at the hands of the lawmaking body, had visited his back office and closed the door after them, and in the course of the conversation had referred to the relationship of the young lawyer to Hilary Vane. At such times Austen would freely acknowledge the debt of gratitude he owed his father ...
— The Crossing • Winston Churchill

... because one has a right to clean streets, regardless of the distant neighbor's welfare or interest. When the right to health is granted health laws are made, and all men within the jurisdiction of the lawmaking power own health machinery that provides for the administration of those laws. A system of public baths takes the place of a bathhouse supported by charity; a law restricting the construction and management of all tenements takes the place of a block of model tenements, financed by some wealthy ...
— Civics and Health • William H. Allen

... its relation to the individual, by making it impossible for the state ever to appear, in its dealings with citizens, in the full plenitude of sovereign powers; also the principle of the participation of citizens in the lawmaking power, as a means for securing, in behalf of the individual, a direct check on this, the strongest branch, and an indirect check on the entire government of the state. This system of checks and limitations, which goes by the name ...
— Readings on Fascism and National Socialism • Various

... now at last turned its attention to the great work for which it had originally been summoned, and drew up a constitution for the republic. This provided that the lawmaking power should be vested in a legislative assembly consisting of two houses. The lower house was called the Council of the Five Hundred, and the upper chamber the Council of the Elders. Members of the latter were required to be at least forty years of age. The ...
— An Introduction to the History of Western Europe • James Harvey Robinson

... now before him the political principle to be here maintained—pure democracy as distinguished from representative government. My argument, then, becomes this: To show that, by means of the one lawmaking method to which pure democracy is restricted,—that of direct legislation by the citizenship,—the political "ring," "boss," and "heeler" may be abolished, the American plutocracy destroyed, and government simplified ...
— Direct Legislation by the Citizenship through the Initiative and Referendum • James W. Sullivan



Words linked to "Lawmaking" :   decriminalisation, filibuster, criminalisation, governance, enactment, jurisprudence, government, administration, governing, criminalization, statute law, passage, government activity, reconsider, law, decriminalization



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