¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Infractions
1. infraction [n] - See also: infraction
Lexicographical Neighbors of Infractions
Literary usage of Infractions
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Boot Camps for Juvenile Offenders: An Implementation Evaluation of Three by Blair B. Borque (1997)
"Distribution of Serious infractions of Boot Camp Rules and Regulations: Year 1
... a wide variety of infractions such as being in an unauthorized location, ..."
2. The Criminal Code of Japan by Japan, Joseph Ernest De Becker (1907)
"OF infractions NOT CONSUMMATED. 43. When the execution of an offence has ...
Cases where infractions not consummated are punishable are specified in the ..."
3. The Federalist: A Commentary on the Constitution of the United States by Alexander Hamilton, James Madison, John Jay (1898)
"PERIODICAL CORRECTING OF infractions OF THE CONSTITUTION. The merits and
disadvantages of short and long intervals—Example of Pennsylvania. ..."
4. The Legal Obligations Arising Out of Treaty Relations Between China and by Minchien Tuk Zung Tyau (1917)
"... this clause cannot infractions. be availed of where infractions of customs
regulations have been committed. For, in such cases, it will be remembered ..."
5. An Introduction to the Study of the Government of Modern States by William Franklin Willoughby (1919)
"Courts as Bodies to Prevent infractions of Law and Violation of Rights.— Another
function performed by courts is that of serving as organs to prevent ..."
6. The Law of Nations: Or, Principles of the Law of Nature, Applied to the by Emer de Vattel, Joseph Chitty (1883)
"The infractions of a treaty of peace by allies, even by those who have been
included in it, or who joined in it as principals, can therefore produce no ..."
7. History of the United States from the Compromise of 1850 by James Ford Rhodes (1895)
"... arrested in Kentucky and Missouri were also incarcerated.1 That these arrests
were infractions of the Constitution need not for a moment be questioned. ..."