law and order
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
English
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]- law-and-order (attributive use):
Pronunciation
[edit]- (General American) IPA(key): /lɔ.ənˈoɹdɚ/
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /lɔː.ɹənˈɔːdə/
Noun
[edit]- (dated, 17th century) The principles under which the world and its components operate.
- 1653, John Allington, The Grand Conspiracy of the Members Against the Minde, page 13:
- For, as in all Monarchies, it is the Law and Order of God Almighty that Subjects receive from, and not give unto their Soveraigne Lawes
- 1659, William Ames, The Substance of Christian Religion, page 135:
- But all evill of punishment ariseth from evill of fault and this evill of fault is from the creature itself, breaking the Law and Order that God hath set to it.
- 1677, Theophilus Gale, The Court of the Gentiles, Or, A Discourse Touching the Original of Human, page 187:
- Neither do Law and Order agree in the reciprocation of Names only, but also in their Natures. Hence Plato oft useth them promiscuously one for the other, and joins them together as exegetic each of other.
- The strict enforcement of law, statutes, and social conventions.
- 2018 April 2, Harvey Thomlinson, “China’s Communist Party Is Abandoning Workers”, in The New York Times[1], →ISSN, →OCLC, archived from the original on 2018-04-02, Opinion[2]:
- The government’s default approach to labor disputes has been to treat them as a threat to law and order. After a widely reported miners’ strike in the northeastern city of Shuangyashan in 2016, for example, the Public Security Bureau arrested 30 people for what it called serious criminal charges.
Translations
[edit]enforcement of law, statutes and social conventions
|