Definition, Meaning & Synonyms | English word LICIT
LICIT
Definitions of LICIT
- Not forbidden by formal or informal rules.
- (legal) Explicitly established or constituted by law.
Number of letters
5
Is palindrome
No
Examples of Using LICIT in a Sentence
- Durkheim pointed out how many primitive rites culminated in abandoning the distinction between licit and immoral behavior.
- As with other licit opioids used for medical purposes in other countries, including even much weaker opioids like nicocodeine, benzylmorphine, and tilidine, the reason for dihydromorphine being in Schedule I is that it was not in medical use in the US at time the Controlled Substances Act of 1970 was drawn up.
- The Kharijites responded defiantly that all of them were responsible for the murders as they all considered it licit to kill his followers.
- In the ports of Yurimaguas trade is in tropical forest produce, particularly hardwoods, petroleum, contraband, and goods (licit and otherwise) from the Andean highlands or Pacific Coast sent down-river to Iquitos and beyond (the Port Authority of Yurimaguas, ENAPU is in charge of the International Puerto de Yurimaguas, Peru).
- The International Narcotics Control Board states that an over production in licit opiates since 2000 has led to stockpiles in producing countries 'that could cover demand for two years'.
- In the remaining chapters he considers: geometry and arithmetic, which are dealt with briefly; optics; statics, in which a variety of mechanical topics including pyrotechnics and automata are considered; music; cosmography; geography, in which he includes a discussion on the Americas, using Spanish as well as Latin in the heading of a table concerning rents of metropolitan churches and cathedrals; hydrography, air, atmosphere, the sunset, meteorites, volcanoes, and comets; astronomy, in which a reference is made to Copernicus' astronomical observations; astrology, in which he discusses licit and illicit astrology, and reproduces the papal bull of Pope Sixtus V refuting astrology; and, in the last chapter, the calendar.
- Microhistorians like Bednarski often use criminal cases which they see as examples of the "exceptional normal," instances in which boundaries are transgressed illicitly, thereby allowing them to trace the counters of the licit.
- Misyar has been suggested by some authors to be comparable to mut'ah (temporary marriage) and that they find it for the sole purpose of "sexual gratification in a licit manner".
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