n
Abbreviation of one L. [A law student in his or her first year of law school.]
n
Abbreviation of three L. [A law student in his or her third (and usually final) year of law school.]
n
Abbreviation of apprentice. [A trainee, especially in a skilled trade.]
n
Alternative spelling of ACT [An instance of a certain standardized college admissions test in the United States, originally called the American College Test.]
n
Alternative form of ACT [An instance of a certain standardized college admissions test in the United States, originally called the American College Test.]
adv
Alternative form of ab initio [(law) From the time when a law, legal right or decree, contract, ownership interest, partnership (etc.) comes into force.]
n
Abbreviation of abridgement.
n
Alternative spelling of abbr.
n
Alternative spelling of abbrev.
v
Abbreviation of abdicated.
n
Abbreviation of abridgement.
adv
Abbreviation of absolutely. [In an absolute or unconditional manner; utterly, positively, wholly.]
n
(law) Abbreviation of academies.
adv
(text messaging, Internet slang) Abbreviation of actually. [(modal) In act or in fact; really; in truth; positively.]
n
(grammar) Abbreviation of accusative. [(grammar) The accusative case.]
n
Abbreviation of accusative cognate.
n
Abbreviation of acceleration. [(uncountable) The act of accelerating, or the state of being accelerated; increase of motion or action; as opposed to retardation or deceleration.]
n
Abbreviation of adaptation. [(uncountable) The process of adapting something or becoming adapted to a situation; adjustment, modification.]
n
(Internet slang) Address (especially e-mail address).
n
Abbreviation of adjustment. [The action of adjusting something]
n
(law) Abbreviation of advertising. [Communication whose purpose is to influence potential customers about products and services.]
n
Abbreviation of advertisement. [(marketing) A commercial solicitation designed to sell some commodity, service or similar.]
n
(law) Abbreviation of affirmed by a memorandum opinion.
n
Abbreviation of agreement. [(countable) An understanding between entities to follow a specific course of conduct.]
n
Abbreviation of agriculture. [The art or science of cultivating the ground, including the harvesting of crops, and the rearing and management of livestock]
adj
Abbreviation of agricultural. [Of or pertaining to agriculture]
n
(law) Abbreviation of alternative. [A situation which allows a mutually exclusive choice between two or more possibilities; a choice between two or more possibilities.]
n
(law) Abbreviation of amendments.
n
(in bibliographies) Abbreviation of annotated.
n
(in bibliographies) Abbreviation of anonymous.
n
Abbreviation of answer. [A response or reply; something said or done in reaction to a statement or question.]
n
Abbreviation of apprentice. [A trainee, especially in a skilled trade.]
n
Abbreviation of application. [The act of applying or laying on, in a literal sense]
n
(law) Abbreviation of appendices.
n
Abbreviation of appointment. [The act of appointing a person to hold an office or to have a position of trust]
n
Abbreviation of appointment. [The act of appointing a person to hold an office or to have a position of trust]
n
(law) Abbreviation of arbitrator. [A person to whom the authority to settle or judge a dispute is delegated.]
n
(law) Short for Archbold Criminal Pleading, Evidence and Practice.
n
Abbreviation of attribution. [The act of attributing something.]
n
Abbreviation of attorney. [(US) A lawyer; one who advises or represents others in legal matters as a profession.]
n
Abbreviation of audience. [A group of people within hearing; specifically, a large gathering of people listening to or watching a performance, speech, etc.]
n
(law) Abbreviation of authority. [(uncountable) Power or right to make or enforce rules or give orders; or a position having such power or right.]
n
(dated, Boston) Abbreviation of Avenue (used in street names).
n
Abbreviation of average. [(mathematics) The arithmetic mean.]
n
Abbreviation of bachelor: used in abbreviations of names of bachelor's degrees, usually followed by an abbreviation indicating the specific discipline. [A person, especially a man, who is socially regarded as able to marry, but has not yet.]
n
Abbreviation of Bachelor of Literature.
n
(law) Abbreviation of board. [A relatively long, wide and thin piece of any material, usually wood or similar, often for use in construction or furniture-making.]
n
(law) Abbreviation of Blackstone's Commentaries on the Laws of England.
n
(economics) The fast-growing economies of the above countries
adj
Abbreviation of bypass.
n
Abbreviation of C corporation. [(business, US) Any corporation that is taxed separately from its owners.]
n
(law) Abbreviation of cease and desist. [(law, chiefly attributive) A demand that one stop and not resume continuing a certain behavior, such as copyright infringement, trademark infringement, slander, or libel.]
n
(chiefly law) Abbreviation of chapter(s).
n
(law) Abbreviation of chief justice. [The senior presiding justice of a court.]
adv
Abbreviation of circa.
n
(law) Abbreviation of capias ad satisfaciendam.
n
Abbreviation of calculus. [(dated, countable) Calculation; computation.]
n
Abbreviation for capacity.
n
(law) Abbreviation of casualty. [Something that happens by chance, especially an unfortunate event; an accident, a disaster.]
n
Abbreviation of chapters.
n
Abbreviation of Creative Commons Attribution No Derivatives license.
n
Acronym of covenant, condition, and restriction. [(law) An agreement to do or not do a particular thing.]
adj
Abbreviation of certified.
n
Abbreviation of chapters.
n
(law) Abbreviation of circuit, with respect to a circuit court. [The act of moving or revolving around, or as in a circle or orbit; a revolution]
n
(law) Abbreviation of claim(s).
n
(law) Abbreviation of clauses.
n
(computing) Abbreviation of command. [An order to do something.]
n
(law) Abbreviation of comment. [A spoken or written remark.]
n
(law) Abbreviation of comments.
n
Alternative form of copro.
n
Abbreviation of code of conduct. [A set of rules dictating acceptable behaviour and decisions in a specified environment.]
n
Abbreviation of coefficient. [(mathematics) A constant by which an algebraic term is multiplied.]
n
Abbreviation of colour. [Australia, Canada, Ireland, New Zealand, South Africa, and UK standard spelling of color.]
n
(law) Abbreviation of college. [(obsolete) A corporate group; a group of colleagues.]
n
(law) Abbreviation of columns. [(juggling) pattern which involves throwing props in the air alternately.]
adj
Abbreviation of commercial. [Of or pertaining to commerce.]
n
(law) Abbreviation of commission. [A sending or mission (to do or accomplish something).]
n
(law) Abbreviation of commissioner. [A member of a commission.]
n
(law) Abbreviation of committee. [A body of one or more persons convened for the accomplishment of some specific purpose, typically with formal protocols.]
n
(law) Abbreviation of communication. [The act or fact of communicating anything; transmission.]
n
(law) Abbreviation of commonwealth. [(obsolete) The well-being of a community.]
n
(law) Abbreviation of compensation. [The act or principle of compensating.]
n
(law) Abbreviation of complaint. [The act of complaining.]
n
Abbreviation of conical scanning.
n
Abbreviation of concentration. [The direction of attention to a specific object.]
n
(law) Abbreviation of conciliation. [The process of bringing peace and harmony; the ending of strife.]
adj
Abbreviation of concrete. [Real, actual, tangible.]
adj
(grammar) Abbreviation of conditional. [Limited by a condition.]
n
(law) Abbreviation of condominium. [Joint sovereignty over a territory by two or more countries.]
n
(law) Abbreviation of confederated.
n
(sports) Abbreviation of Connecticut. [A state in the northeastern United States.]
n
Abbreviation of connexion. [(chiefly UK) Dated spelling of connection.]
n
Abbreviation of constable. [One holding the lowest rank in most Commonwealth police forces. (See also chief constable.)]
n
Abbreviation of (De) Consolatio(ne) ad Polybium.
n
(law) Abbreviation of consolidated.
n
Abbreviation of constable. [One holding the lowest rank in most Commonwealth police forces. (See also chief constable.)]
n
(law) Abbreviation of construction. [The process of constructing.]
v
Abbreviation of continued
n
(law) Abbreviation of continental. [Someone from the continent.]
n
Abbreviation of contraction. [A reversible reduction in size.]
n
Abbreviation of contribution. [Something given or offered that adds to a larger whole.]
n
Abbreviation of contributors.
n
Abbreviation of corner. [The space in the angle between converging lines or walls which meet in a point.]
n
(law) Abbreviation of corrections. [(US, Canada, law) Relating to the punishment, treatment, or supervision of persons who have been convicted of a crime]
n
Abbreviation of council. [A committee that leads or governs (e.g. city council, student council).]
n
(biblical) Abbreviation of Corinthians. [(biblical) Either of the two books in the New Testament of the Bible that are written as epistles to the people of Corinth and which are attributed to Paul the Apostle, Sosthenes and Timothy.]
n
Abbreviation of court. [(Australia, US) A street with no outlet, a cul-de-sac.]
n
Abbreviation of court. [(Australia, US) A street with no outlet, a cul-de-sac.]
n
(law) Abbreviation of court of appeals. [(law) appellate court]
n
(object-oriented programming) Abbreviation of constructor. [A person who, or thing that, constructs.]
n
(law) Abbreviation of centre.
n
Alternative form of ctrl. Abbreviation of control.
n
Abbreviation of cum dividend.
n
Abbreviation of custody. [The legal right to take care of something or somebody, especially children.]
n
(law) Abbreviation of customs. (government department or agency authorized to collect the taxes imposed on imported goods) [(in the plural) The duties or taxes imposed on imported or exported goods.]
n
(botany, avoided) Abbreviation of convariety. [A nomenclatural subgroup of a subspecies above a variety, employed for cultivated plants (but proscribed by the ICNCP, preferring the term cultivar group)]
n
Abbreviation of Company.
v
Abbreviation of died (or death)
n
(grammar) Abbreviation of dative. [(grammar) The dative case.]
n
(law) Abbreviation of debate. [An argument, or discussion, usually in an ordered or formal setting, often with more than two people, generally ending with a vote or other decision.]
n
(law) Abbreviation of declaration. [A written or oral indication of a fact, opinion, intention, belief, etc.]
n
(law) Abbreviation of decisions.
n
(law) Abbreviation of defense. [The action of defending or protecting from attack, danger, or injury.]
n
Initialism of diversity, equity, inclusion, and belonging. [The quality of being diverse or different; difference or unlikeness.]
n
Abbreviation of departments.
n
(law) Abbreviation of departments.
n
Abbreviation of Devonshire or Devon.
n
Abbreviation of diploma. [A document issued by an educational institution testifying that the recipient has earned a degree or has successfully completed a particular course of study.]
n
(law) Abbreviation of distributing.
n
(economics) An index created by the World Bank, where higher rankings indicate better, usually simpler regulations for businesses and stronger protections of property rights.
adj
Abbreviation of ecological. [Relating to ecology, the interrelationships of organisms and their environment.]
adj
Abbreviation of economic. [Pertaining to an economy.]
n
(law) Abbreviation of economic.
adj
Abbreviation of edited or edited by.
n
Abbreviation of Edinburgh. [The capital city of Scotland.]
n
(UK, dated) Pronunciation spelling of education. [(uncountable) The process of imparting knowledge, skill and judgment.]
n
(Scouting, education) Explain, demonstrate, guide, enable; an educating method.
adj
Abbreviation of edited. [Having been altered from the original version.]
n
Alternative form of editress (“female editor”) [(dated) A female editor.]
n
Abbreviation of edition. [(publishing) A written work edited and published, as by a certain editor or in a certain manner, or at a certain time.]
n
(abbreviation) education.
n
A business that provides education services.
adj
Abbreviation of educational. [Of, or relating to education.]
n
(law) Abbreviation of emergency. [A situation which poses an immediate risk and which requires urgent attention.]
n
(law) Abbreviation of employer. [A person, firm or other entity which pays for or hires the services of another person.]
n
(law) Abbreviation of employment. [The work or occupation for which one is used, and often paid]
n
(law) Abbreviation of employee. [An individual who provides labor to a company or another person.]
n
(law) Abbreviation of engineering. [(uncountable) The application of mathematics and the physical sciences to the needs of humanity and the development of technology.]
n
(law) Abbreviation of engineer. [A soldier engaged in designing or constructing military works for attack or defence, or other engineering works.]
n
(law) Abbreviation of entertainment. [An activity designed to give pleasure, enjoyment, diversion, amusement, or relaxation to an audience, no matter whether the audience participates passively as in watching opera or a movie, or actively as in games.]
n
(law) Abbreviation of environment. [The surroundings of, and influences on, a particular item of interest.]
n
(law) Abbreviation of environmental. [(computing) Any factor relating to the physical environment in which hardware is operated, such as the room temperature or the number of racks used to hold equipment.]
n
(law) Abbreviation of equity. [Fairness, impartiality, or justice as determined in light of "natural law" or "natural right".]
n
(law) Abbreviation of errors.
n
(education) Abbreviation of exercise. [(countable) Any activity designed to develop or hone a skill or ability.]
adj
Abbreviation of excluding.
n
Abbreviation of Exodus. (a book of the Bible) [The departure of the Hebrew slaves from Egypt under the leadership of Moses.]
n
Abbreviation of executor. [A person who carries out some task.]
n
Initialism of expiry date. [(UK) The date on which something runs out or expires and becomes out of date, in many cases needing renewal.]
v
Abbreviation of expires.
n
Abbreviation of expiration date. [A date by which an object either should not be used or loses its value, depending upon the item.]
n
Abbreviation of executrix. [(chiefly law) A female executor.]
n
(law) Abbreviation of examples.
n
(trigonometry) Abbreviation of exsecant. [(trigonometry) The trigonometric function sec(x) − 1. Abbreviation: exsec]
v
Abbreviation of featuring.
n
(US, economics) Clipping of Federal Reserve. (The Federal Reserve Board or System) [(US, economics) Federal Reserve System.]
n
(law) Abbreviation of figures.
n
(law) Abbreviation of financial.
n
(law) Abbreviation of folios.
n
(medicine) Abbreviation of function. [What something does or is used for.]
n
Abbreviation of general education. [(education) Education in a number of important subjects, taught in schools.]
n
(US politics, law) Abbreviation of House Resolution; also H.Res.
n
(US politics, law) Abbreviation of House Resolution; also H. Res.
n
Abbreviation of header. [The upper portion of a page (or other) layout.]
n
(law) Abbreviation of historical notes.
n
(law) Abbreviation of hospital. [A large medical facility, usually in a building with multiple floors, where seriously ill or injured patients are given extensive medical and/or surgical treatment.]
n
(computing) Abbreviation of hardware. [Fixtures, equipment, tools and devices used for general-purpose construction and repair of a structure or object. Also such equipment as sold as stock by a store of the same name, e.g. hardware store.]
adv
(bibliography) Abbreviation of illustrations in color.
n
(law) Abbreviation of illustration. [The act of illustrating; the act of making clear and distinct;]
n
(law) Abbreviation of importer. [One who, or that which, imports: especially a person or company importing goods into a country.]
v
Abbreviation of including.
v
Abbreviation of imitation.
n
(law) Abbreviation of indemnity. [Security from damage, loss, or penalty.]
n
(law) Abbreviation of industries.
n
(law) Abbreviation of information. [That which resolves uncertainty; anything that answers the question of "what a given entity is".]
n
(law) Abbreviation of insurance. [A means of indemnity against a future occurrence of an uncertain event.]
n
(law) Abbreviation of international. [(sports) Someone who has represented their country in a particular sport.]
n
(law) Abbreviation of inter-American.
adv
Abbreviation of internationally. [In an international manner.]
n
(law) Abbreviation of introduction. [The act or process of introducing.]
n
(law) Abbreviation of investment. [The act of investing, or state of being invested.]
n
(medicine) Abbreviation of investigation. [The act of investigating; the process of inquiring into or following up; research, especially patient or thorough inquiry or examination]
n
Abbreviation of Juntine. [A Juntine edition of a given text. (Where there are multiple editions of the same text, they are often qualified as first Juntine, second Juntine, etc.)]
n
Initialism of joint venture. [A cooperative partnership between two individuals or businesses in which profits and risks are shared.]
n
Abbreviation of licensee. [(law) A person to whom a license is granted]
n
(law) Abbreviation of line. [(geometry) An infinitely extending one-dimensional figure that has no curvature; one that has length but not breadth or thickness.]
n
(law) Abbreviation of laboratory. [A room, building or institution equipped for scientific research, experimentation or analysis.]
adj
Abbreviation of long. [Having much distance from one terminating point on an object or an area to another terminating point (usually applies to horizontal dimensions; see Usage Notes below).]
n
(law) Abbreviation of liability. [An obligation, debt or responsibility owed to someone.]
n
Abbreviation of Library.
n
Abbreviation of license/licence.
n
Abbreviation of licence/license.
n
(anatomy) Abbreviation of ligament. [(anatomy) A band of strong tissue that connects bones to other bones.]
n
Abbreviation of litigant in person. [(law) A litigant without an attorney.]
adj
Abbreviation of literal. [Exactly as stated; read or understood without additional interpretation; according to the letter or verbal expression; real; not figurative or metaphorical.]
n
(plural only) Abbreviation of litteræ humaniores.
n
(law) Abbreviation of litigation. [(law) The conduct of a lawsuit.]
n
(law) Abbreviation of lines. [(film, theater) Words spoken by the actors.]
n
Abbreviation of Bachelor of Laws. [(law) An undergraduate degree in the study of law.]
n
(dated, fandom slang) Correspondence, usually a letter, sent to a periodical commenting on either the contents of a previous issue or an earlier letter of comment.
adj
Abbreviation of limited. [With certain (often specified) limits placed upon it.]
n
(education) A silent e (in certain English words, such as cake and time) that appears to change the pronunciation of the preceding vowel.
n
(law) Abbreviation of mechanical. [(advertising) Manually created layout of artwork that is camera ready for photographic reproduction.]
n
(law) Abbreviation of mediator. [One who negotiates between parties seeking mutual agreement.]
n
(law) Abbreviation of memorial. [(obsolete) Memory; recollection.]
n
(law) Abbreviation of manufacturing. [The transformation of raw materials into finished products, usually on a large scale.]
n
Abbreviation of manufacturer. [A person or company that manufactures.]
n
Abbreviation of minimum. [The lowest limit.]
n
(economics) Abbreviation of Modern Monetary Theory. [A heterodox economic school of thought that posits that fiscal policy, set to constrain inflation and enable full employment, should be the primary economic stabiliser and prioritises reflection on the nature of money from a chartalist perspective.]
n
Abbreviation of movement. [Physical motion between points in space.]
n
(law) Abbreviation of mutual. [A mutual fund.]
n
(in bibliographies) Abbreviation of no publisher.
n
Abbreviation of nomen actionis. [(grammar) action noun]
adj
(grammar) Abbreviation of neuter. [(now uncommon) Neutral; on neither side; neither one thing nor another.]
n
(informal, abbreviation) Opportunity.
n
(law) Abbreviation of organization. [(uncountable) The quality of being organized.]
n
Initialism of public domain. [The state of not being owned by anyone, and thus freely usable by everyone.]
n
(law) Abbreviation of pharmaceutic.
adj
Abbreviation of phrasal. [Referring to, or used in the manner of, a phrase.]
n
Alternative letter-case form of Pinyinisation
n
Abbreviation of plural. [(grammar, uncountable) The plural number. In English, referring to more or less than one of something.]
n
Abbreviation of plural. [(grammar, uncountable) The plural number. In English, referring to more or less than one of something.]
n
Initialism of peace, love, unity, respect: an unofficial code of conduct in the rave subculture. [A state of tranquility, quiet, and harmony; absence of violence. For instance, a state free from civil disturbance.]
adj
Abbreviation of plurinational. [Describing a state containing large groups of people of different nationalities.]
n
(law) Abbreviation of preamble. [A short preliminary statement or remark, especially an explanatory introduction to a formal document or statute.]
n
Abbreviation of past participle. [(grammar) A participle indicating a completed action or state.]
n
(law) Abbreviation of principles.
adv
Alternative form of pro tem [(chiefly US) temporarily; for the time being]
adj
Alternative form of pro tem [(chiefly US) temporary]
n
(law) Abbreviation of probation. [A period of time when a person occupies a position only conditionally and may easily be removed for poor performance]
n
(law) Abbreviation of professional. [A person who belongs to a profession]
n
Abbreviation of Professor. [The title for someone who holds the professor job.]
n
Abbreviation of published (usually with "by") or publisher.
n
(law) Abbreviation of publishing. [The industry of publishing, including the production and distribution of books, magazines, web sites, newspapers, etc.]
n
(law) Abbreviation of publications.
n
Abbreviation of Private.
adj
Abbreviation of quoted.
adj
Abbreviation of received. [Generally accepted as correct or true.]
adj
Abbreviation of registered. [Having had one's name added to an official list or entered into a register]
n
(law) Abbreviation of rehabilitation. [The process of rehabilitating somebody or something.]
n
(law) Abbreviation of reorganized.
adj
Abbreviation of representing.
adj
Abbreviation of required. [Necessary; obligatory; mandatory.]
n
(law) Abbreviation of resources.
v
(law) Abbreviation of reversed.
v
(law) Abbreviation of reversing.
v
(electronics) Abbreviation of receive. [To take, as something that is offered, given, committed, sent, paid, etc.; to accept; to be given something.]
n
Abbreviation of reaction. [An action or statement in response to a stimulus or other event.]
n
Abbreviation of S corporation. [(business, US) A closely held corporation that makes a valid election to be taxed by the federal government.]
n
(law) Abbreviation of schools.
n
(law) Abbreviation of schedules.
n
(law) Abbreviation of securities.
n
(law) Abbreviation of sections.
v
Abbreviation of sentenced.
n
(law) Abbreviation of series. [A number of things that follow on one after the other or are connected one after the other.]
adj
Abbreviation of singular (grammatical number) [Being only one of a larger population.]
adv
(law) Abbreviation of scilicet (“namely, to wit, particularly”), indicating that a legal document was executed in the designated place within that jurisdiction for such an act. [namely, to wit, as follows]
n
Abbreviation of strength. [The quality or degree of being strong.]
n
(law) Abbreviation of Supreme Court. [(Canada) The Supreme Court of Canada.]
n
Abbreviation of services. [(business, economics) That which is produced, then traded, bought or sold, then finally consumed and consists of an action or work.]
n
(law) Abbreviation of systems.
n
(law) Abbreviation of terms and conditions. [(law) A specification of restrictions for the use of goods or services.]
n
(Internet, historical) Formerly, any domain registrar serving the .uk top-level domain.
n
(in bibliographies) Abbreviation of tentative. [A trial; an experiment; an attempt.]
n
Abbreviation of table header.
n
(law) Abbreviation of title. [An appellation given to a person or family to signify either veneration, official position, social rank, the possession of assets or properties, or a professional or academic qualification. See also Category:Titles]
n
(law) Abbreviation of trustee. [A person to whom property is legally committed in trust, to be applied either for the benefit of specified individuals, or for public uses; one who is intrusted with property for the benefit of another.]
n
(law) Abbreviation of transcontinental. [(chiefly in the plural) a transcontinental railroad.]
adj
Abbreviation of translated.
n
Abbreviation of transcript. [Something which has been transcribed; a writing or composition consisting of the same words as the original; a written copy.]
n
(in bibliographies) Abbreviation of unabridged. [An unabridged publication, especially a reference work]
n
(law) Abbreviation of uniform. [A distinctive outfit that serves to identify members of a group.]
n
(law) Abbreviation of utility. [The state or condition of being useful; usefulness.]
adv
Alternative form of v.g. [(abbreviation, initialism) Used to introduce an example or list of examples to illustrate what is being discussed.]
n
Abbreviation of verb. [(grammar) A word that indicates an action, event, or state of being.]
n
(law) Abbreviation of veteran, as used in case citations in the United States. [A person with long experience of a particular activity.]
n
(law) Abbreviation of vidua (Latin for “widow”).
v
(rare) Alternative spelling of vide (“see”) [(US, African-American Vernacular) divide (separate into parts, cleave asunder)]
n
Abbreviation of vindication. [The act of vindicating or the state of being vindicated.]
n
Abbreviation of worker's compensation. [Insurance that pays medical costs of personal injuries sustained by working.]
n
Abbreviation of workers' compensation. [Insurance that pays for medical costs resulting from injuries sustained by employees in the workplace.]
n
Abbreviation of workman's compensation. [Insurance that pays medical costs of personal injuries sustained by working.]
n
Abbreviation of workmen's compensation. [Insurance that pays medical costs of personal injuries sustained by working.]
adj
(finance) Abbreviation of ex dividend. [(finance) Of a declared dividend, belonging to the seller rather than the buyer.]
n
(obsolete) Abbreviation of Xember.
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