The stage was now set for Humphreys' brilliant manipulation of the legalcode.
2
The usual legalcode in this matter is shown by the notice below:
3
He liberalized the media and enshrined in France's legalcode various civil freedoms.
4
More importantly, it demonstrated the intellectual similarity between legalcode and software code.
5
A national administrative structure, educational system, and legalcode form three significant positive remnants.
1
A codeoflaw is more easily deified than a flesh-and-blood ruler.
2
During the second century BC, Babylon's greatest ruler, Hammurabi, produced the first codeoflaw.
3
Dr. Lovell explains the attitude of the Anglo-Saxon race toward their divine codeoflaw.
4
That is the De Gamelyn codeoflaw, said the man, and handed Tim the flagon.
5
It constitutes the only literature, the only codeoflaw and ethics, of many peoples and tribes.
Ús de law code en anglès
1
Secondly, the emperor was bound by the lawcode: he could not change it nor abolish it.
2
Each new dynasty developed a new lawcode, usually changing only details of the punishment, not the basic regulations.
3
Although banned by the Italian civil lawcode, Italian banks have been using compound interest for over 50 years, Adusbef said.
4
While Mursi has promised to protect freedoms, his campaign was also peppered with promises to implement sharia, the Islamic lawcode.
5
Returning to their own land, the exiles took back with them the lawcode which the priests had manufactured for them.
6
But certainly Justinian contrived to strike into history as no other Byzantine emperor did; with his lawcode, and with his church.
7
The Uniform Code of Military Justice, the unique lawcode that governs the armed forces, does not allow a guilty plea to a capital charge.
8
Experts say civil lawcodes make judges reluctant to overrule contractual agreements, such as a sales deal.
9
I suppose a part of it is how much time I spend wrestling with legal briefs and lawcodes.
10
"The imperial lawcode forbids the application of collective guilt-
11
Lawcodes were associated with their names, and even miracles, when politics joined the forces of magic and religion (often playing one against the other).