different between law vs ukase

law

English

Pronunciation

  • (UK) enPR: , IPA(key): /l??/
    • Rhymes: -??
  • (US) enPR: , IPA(key): /l?/
  • (cotcaught merger) enPR: , IPA(key): /l?/
  • Homophone: la (in accents with the cot-caught merger)
  • Homophone: lore (in non-rhotic accents with the horse-hoarse merger)

Etymology 1

From Middle English lawe, la?e, from Old English lagu (law), from Old Norse l?g (law, literally things laid down or fixed), originally the plural of lag (layer, stratum, a laying in order, measure, stroke), from Proto-Germanic *lag? (that which is laid down), from Proto-Indo-European *leg?- (to lie). Cognate with Icelandic lög (things laid down, law), Swedish lag (law), Danish lov (law). Replaced Old English ? and ?esetnes. More at lay. Unrelated to French loi nor Spanish ley, since they both derive from *le?- (to gather).

Noun

law (countable and uncountable, plural laws)

  1. The body of binding rules and regulations, customs, and standards established in a community by its legislative and judicial authorities.
    1. The body of such rules that pertain to a particular topic.
    2. Common law, as contrasted with equity.
  2. A binding regulation or custom established in a community in this way.
  3. (more generally) A rule, such as:
    1. Any rule that must or should be obeyed, concerning behaviours and their consequences. (Compare mores.)
    2. A rule or principle regarding the construction of language or art.
    3. A statement (in physics, etc) of an (observed, established) order or sequence or relationship of phenomena which is invariable under certain conditions. (Compare theory.)
      • 1992 March 2, Richard Preston, The New Yorker, "The Mountains of Pi":
        Observing pi is easier than studying physical phenomena, because you can prove things in mathematics, whereas you can’t prove anything in physics. And, unfortunately, the laws of physics change once every generation.
    4. (mathematics, logic) A statement (of relation) that is true under specified conditions; a mathematical or logical rule.
    5. Any statement of the relation of acts and conditions to their consequences.
    6. (cricket) One of the official rules of cricket as codified by the its (former) governing body, the MCC.
  4. The control and order brought about by the observance of such rules.
  5. (informal) A person or group that act(s) with authority to uphold such rules and order (for example, one or more police officers).
  6. The profession that deals with such rules (as lawyers, judges, police officers, etc).
  7. Jurisprudence, the field of knowledge which encompasses these rules.
  8. Litigation, legal action (as a means of maintaining or restoring order, redressing wrongs, etc).
  9. (now uncommon) An allowance of distance or time (a head start) given to a weaker (human or animal) competitor in a race, to make the race more fair.
  10. (fantasy) One of two metaphysical forces ruling the world in some fantasy settings, also called order, and opposed to chaos.
  11. (law, chiefly historical) An oath sworn before a court, especially disclaiming a debt. (Chiefly in the phrases "wager of law", "wage one's law", "perform one's law", "lose one's law".)
Derived terms
Translations

Verb

law (third-person singular simple present laws, present participle lawing, simple past and past participle lawed)

  1. (obsolete) To work as a lawyer; to practice law.
  2. (transitive, intransitive, chiefly dialectal) To prosecute or sue (someone), to litigate.
    • 1860, George Eliot (Mary Anne Lewes), The Mill on the Floss:
      Your husband's [...] so given to lawing, they say. I doubt he'll leave you poorly off when he dies.
  3. (nonstandard) To rule over (with a certain effect) by law; govern.
  4. (informal) To enforce the law.
  5. To subject to legal restrictions.

See also

  • Appendix:Legal terms
  • Appendix:Glossary of legal terms
  • Category:Law
  • lawe

Etymology 2

From Middle English lawe, from Old English hl?w (burial mound). Also spelled low.

Noun

law (plural laws)

  1. (obsolete) A tumulus of stones.
  2. (Scotland and Northern England, archaic) A hill.

Etymology 3

Compare la.

Interjection

law

  1. (dated) An exclamation of mild surprise; lawks.

References

Etymology in ODS

Anagrams

  • AWL, WAL, WLA, Wal., awl, lwa

Khumi Chin

Etymology

From Proto-Kuki-Chin *khlaa, from Proto-Sino-Tibetan *g-la. Cognates include Tibetan ???? (zla ba) and Burmese ? (la.).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /l??/

Noun

law

  1. moon
  2. month

References

  • R. Shafer (1944) , “Khimi Grammar and Vocabulary”, in Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London, volume 11, issue 2, page 422
  • K. E. Herr (2011) The phonological interpretation of minor syllables, applied to Lemi Chin?[1], Payap University, page 42

Lower Sorbian

Etymology

From Proto-Slavic *l?v?, from Proto-Indo-European *lewo-.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /law/

Noun

law m (diminutive lawk, feminine equivalent lawowka)

  1. lion (Panthera leo)

Declension

Derived terms

  • lawica
  • lawik
  • lawowy

Further reading

  • law in Ernst Muka/Mucke (St. Petersburg and Prague 1911–28): S?ownik dolnoserbskeje r?cy a jeje nar?cow / Wörterbuch der nieder-wendischen Sprache und ihrer Dialekte. Reprinted 2008, Bautzen: Domowina-Verlag
  • law in Manfred Starosta (1999): Dolnoserbsko-nimski s?ownik / Niedersorbisch-deutsches Wörterbuch. Bautzen: Domowina-Verlag.

Middle English

Noun

law

  1. Alternative form of lawe

Scots

Noun

law (plural laws)

  1. law
  2. rounded hill (usually conical, frequently isolated or conspicuous)

Sranan Tongo

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /lau?/

Verb

law

  1. To be crazy
  2. To drive somebody crazy

Upper Sorbian

Etymology

From Proto-Slavic *l?v?, from Proto-Indo-European *lewo-.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /lau?/

Noun

law m

  1. lion (Panthera leo)

Declension

Derived terms

  • lawica, lawjace/-a/-y, lawowe/-a/-y

Welsh

Noun

law

  1. Soft mutation of glaw (rain).

Mutation

Noun

law

  1. Soft mutation of llaw (hand).

Mutation

law From the web:

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ukase

English

Alternative forms

  • ukaz/Ukaz
  • Ukase

Etymology

Borrowed from Russian ????? (ukáz, edict, decree).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ju??ke?z/

Noun

ukase (plural ukases)

  1. An authoritative proclamation; an edict, especially decreed by a Russian czar or (later) emperor.
    • c. 1844, Henry Brougham, Political Philosophy
      Many estates peopled with crown peasants have been, according to an ukase of Peter the Great, ceded to particular individuals on condition of establishing manufactories []
    • 1805, The Times, 6 May 1805, page 3, col. C:
      An Ukase, it appears, has been issued by the Emperor Alexander, to facilitate the introduction of calimancoes and other Norwich goods into his Empire.
    • 1988, James McPherson, Battle Cry of Freedom, Oxford 2004, p. 704:
      The planters, he explained in a letter to Lincoln, would accept emancipation by ukase in preference to being compelled to enact it themselves in a new constitution.
  2. (figuratively) Any absolutist order or arrogant proclamation
    • 1965, John Fowles, The Magus:
      I knew a stunned plunge of disappointment and a bitter anger. What right had he to issue such an arbitrary ukase?
    • 2008, Stephen Burt, "Kick Over the Scenery", London Review of Books, July 2008:
      It is a short step from discovering that the world we know is a fake or a cheat to discovering that human beings are themselves factitious: that we are robots, ‘simulacra’ (the title of one of Dick’s novels), ‘just reflex machines’, ‘repeating doomed patterns, a single pattern, over and over’ in accordance with biological or economic ukases.

Translations

See also

  • decree
  • edict
  • ukase on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
  • Ukaz in the Encyclopædia Britannica (11th edition, 1911)

Anagrams

  • Akesu

French

Alternative forms

  • oukase

Etymology

Borrowed from Russian ????? (ukáz, edict, decree).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /y.kaz/, /u.kaz/

Noun

ukase m (plural ukases)

  1. (historical) ukase (a decree from a Russian ruler, or any absolute or arrogant order)
  2. edict, dictate

Descendants

  • ? Dutch: oekaze

See also

  • décret m
  • édit m
  • loi
  • ordonnance

Further reading

  • “ukase” in Trésor de la langue française informatisé (The Digitized Treasury of the French Language).

Italian

Alternative forms

  • ucase

Noun

ukase m (invariable)

  1. ukase

Portuguese

Alternative forms

  • ucase

Noun

ukase m (plural ukases)

  1. ukase (proclamation by a Russian ruler)

ukase From the web:

  • abase meaning
  • what does ukase mean in english
  • what does ukase
  • what is ukase
  • what do ukase meaning
  • what dies ukase mean
  • what language is ukase
  • definition abase
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