List of antonyms from "junky" to antonyms from "just for laughs"


Discover our 251 antonyms available for the terms "just desserts, jury's out, just, junque, just as soon" and many more. Click on one of the words below and go directly to the antonyms associated with it.

Definition of the day : « jural »

  • As in lawful : adj allowable, legitimate
  • As in legit : adj lawful
Example sentences :
  • Take, for example, the conceptions borrowed from the jural sphere.
  • Extract from : « Ethics » by John Dewey and James Hayden Tufts
  • By this emphasis, arise the jural theories (Latin, jus, law).
  • Extract from : « Ethics » by John Dewey and James Hayden Tufts
  • This is a jural postulate of civilized society as we know it.
  • Extract from : « An Introduction to the Philosophy of Law » by Roscoe Pound
  • Woolsey says that "a slave sojourning to a free land cannot be treated as his master's property—as destitute of jural capacity."
  • Extract from : « The Journal of Negro History, Volume 5, 1920 » by Various
  • The civilization of the time did not involve the corollaries of our jural postulate.
  • Extract from : « An Introduction to the Philosophy of Law » by Roscoe Pound
  • The second assimilates ethics to a system of legal enactments, and is connected with the jural conceptions of theology and law.
  • Extract from : « On the Ethics of Naturalism » by William Ritchie Sorley
  • To make these moral instead of jural terms, the first thing that is needed is that we make the whole process an inward one.
  • Extract from : « Ethics » by John Dewey and James Hayden Tufts
  • Each State Legislature is a little political academy for the advancement of jural science and art.
  • Extract from : « Speeches, Addresses, and Occasional Sermons, Volume 3 (of 3) » by Theodore Parker
  • If by any means we can determine the early forms of jural conceptions, they will be invaluable to us.
  • Extract from : « Ancient Law » by Sir Henry James Sumner Maine
  • The jural judgments of individuals are not complete judgments; they are based upon an undefined sense of right and wrong.
  • Extract from : « Introduction to the Science of Sociology » by Robert E. Park