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Definition of Jurisprudentially
1. Adverb. In respect to jurisprudence or the science or philosophy of law.
Definition of Jurisprudentially
1. Adverb. In terms of jurisprudence. ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Lexicographical Neighbors of Jurisprudentially
Literary usage of Jurisprudentially
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Crime and Criminals: Being the Jurisprudence of Crime, Medical, Biological by Charles Arthur Mercier (1919)
"So, too, it is treason, not technically, not in English law, but jurisprudentially
it is treason to do that which is calculated to embroil the State with ..."
2. A Pragmatic Legal Expert System by James Popple (1996)
"... system need not conform to any jurisprudential theory, a pragmatic approach
to expert system design may be preferable to a jurisprudentially pure one. ..."
3. The Thinker: A Review of World-wide Christian Thought (1892)
"... what is said above will be confirmed by the most cursory student of the sacred
text. Viewed jurisprudentially, the law is in very large part a tangle of ..."
4. The Journal of Jurisprudence by Law Library Microform Consortium (1871)
"... notices of new books, events of the quarter, etc., the contents of this number
are: "The Game Laws Jurisprudentially Considered;" "Early English Codes;" ..."
5. The Phrenological Journal, and Magazine of Moral Science (1842)
"Jurisprudentially, the difference would occasion no difficulty. The jury's first
and main inquiry would be, Has the accused committed the crime! ..."