Table of Contents
1. law-breaking
noun. (criminal law) an act punishable by law; usually considered an evil act.
Synonyms
- perpetration
- infraction
- regulatory offence
- statutory offence
- statutory offense
- committal
- commission
- barratry
- transgression
- attack
- criminal offense
- vice crime
- high treason
- offense
- highjack
- lese majesty
- infringement
- capital offense
- violation
- war crime
- attempt
- forgery
- misdemeanor
- hijack
- felony
- thuggery
- crime
- cybercrime
- regulatory offense
- victimless crime
- fraud
- Had crime
- Tazir crime
- criminal offence
- offence
- mayhem
- treason
- misdemeanour
Rhymes with Law Student
- imprudent
- prudent
2. student
noun. ['ˈstuːdənt'] a learner who is enrolled in an educational institution.
Synonyms
- nonreader
- college boy
- college man
- Ivy Leaguer
- overachiever
- passer
- law student
- major
- medico
- pupil
- nonachiever
- seminarian
- skipper
- enrollee
- seminarist
- scholar
- Etonian
- educatee
- auditor
- collegian
- underperformer
- withdrawer
- crammer
- art student
- medical student
- underachiever
- catechumen
- sixth-former
- neophyte
- teacher-student relation
Antonyms
Etymology
- studens (Latin)
3. student
noun. ['ˈstuːdənt'] a learned person (especially in the humanities); someone who by long study has gained mastery in one or more disciplines.
Synonyms
- alumna
- intellectual
- valedictory speaker
- book lover
- bookman
- theologian
- schoolman
- intellect
- Masorite
- valedictorian
- Renaissance man
- savant
- alum
- Schoolman
- Shakespearian
- initiate
- Cabalist
- licentiate
- Islamist
- Vedist
- Shakespearean
- salutatory speaker
- bibliographer
- goliard
- doctor
- theologist
- pedant
- salutatorian
- Kabbalist
- graduate
- musicologist
- philomath
- scholar
- generalist
- post doc
- Sinologist
- scholarly person
- scholastic
- reader
- postdoc
- humanist
- historian
- scholiast
- Arabist
- academician
- Massorete
- philosopher
- historiographer
- bibliophile
- theologiser
- Dr.
- pundit
- grad
- medieval Schoolman
- alumnus
- learned person
- master
- mujtihad
- theologizer
- bookworm
- Masorete
Antonyms
Etymology
- studens (Latin)
4. law
noun. ['ˈlɔ, ˈlɑː'] the collection of rules imposed by authority.
Synonyms
- aggregation
- commercial law
- tax law
- precedent
- ecclesiastical law
- sharia
- civil law
- law of the land
- collection
- mercantile law
- law of nations
- statutory law
- securities law
- martial law
- international law
- shariah law
- accumulation
- canon law
- administrative law
- jurisprudence
- law merchant
- military law
- Mosaic law
- sharia law
- assemblage
- common law
- shariah
- Islamic law
- case law
Antonyms
Etymology
- hlaw (Old English (ca. 450-1100))
- lawe (Middle English (1100-1500))
5. law
noun. ['ˈlɔ, ˈlɑː'] legal document setting forth rules governing a particular kind of activity.
Synonyms
- organic law
- prohibition
- RICO
- poor law
- gag law
- homestead law
- public law
- anti-drug law
- fundamental law
- Riot Act
- antitrust law
- constitution
- instrument
- statute of limitations
- blue law
- jurisprudence
- Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act
- legal document
- official document
- RICO Act
- anti-racketeering law
- legal instrument
- antitrust legislation
Antonyms
Etymology
- hlaw (Old English (ca. 450-1100))
- lawe (Middle English (1100-1500))
6. law
noun. ['ˈlɔ, ˈlɑː'] a rule or body of rules of conduct inherent in human nature and essential to or binding upon human society.
Synonyms
Antonyms
Etymology
- hlaw (Old English (ca. 450-1100))
- lawe (Middle English (1100-1500))
7. law
noun. ['ˈlɔ, ˈlɑː'] a generalization that describes recurring facts or events in nature.
Synonyms
- Archimedes' principle
- Avogadro's hypothesis
- distribution law
- equilibrium law
- law of averages
- concept
- law of large numbers
- Mendel's law
- Planck's radiation law
- Avogadro's law
- Benford's law
- exclusion principle
- Pauli exclusion principle
- principle of relativity
- periodic law
- law of nature
- law of partial pressures
- power law
- law of reciprocal proportions
- law of effect
- Mariotte's law
- Kirchhoff's laws
- law of thermodynamics
- law of diminishing returns
- Stevens' law
- Henry's law
- law of gravitation
- Ohm's law
- Planck's law
- law of multiple proportions
- Dalton's law of partial pressures
- law of chemical equilibrium
- Hubble law
- Newton's law of motion
- law of motion
- law of mass action
- theory
- Boyle's law
- all-or-none law
- Weber's law
- Fechner's law
- law of constant proportion
- Dalton's law
- Mendeleev's law
- law of definite proportions
- Kepler's law
- law of Archimedes
- Coulomb's Law
- Weber-Fechner law
- Kepler's law of planetary motion
- Charles's law
- principle
- law of equivalent proportions
- Bernoulli's law
- Bose-Einstein statistics
- conception
- Pascal's law of fluid pressures
- Hooke's law
- Newton's law of gravitation
- Pascal's law
- Gay-Lussac's law
- Stevens' power law
- construct
- Fermi-Dirac statistics
- Newton's law
- rule
- Hubble's law
Antonyms
Etymology
- hlaw (Old English (ca. 450-1100))
- lawe (Middle English (1100-1500))
8. law
noun. ['ˈlɔ, ˈlɑː'] the branch of philosophy concerned with the law and the principles that lead courts to make the decisions they do.
Antonyms
Etymology
- hlaw (Old English (ca. 450-1100))
- lawe (Middle English (1100-1500))
9. law
noun. ['ˈlɔ, ˈlɑː'] the learned profession that is mastered by graduate study in a law school and that is responsible for the judicial system.
Synonyms
Etymology
- hlaw (Old English (ca. 450-1100))
- lawe (Middle English (1100-1500))